Friday, October 20, 2023

Some notable research snippets of the week

WPI in Contraction for the Sixth Month; core inflation higher (Centrum)

WPI inflation witnessed a yet another contraction in the month of September and registered a deflation of 0.26% YoY, down from -0.52% in August. The print came in slightly lower than the estimates as the general consensus was around -0.5%. This was the 6th month where we have seen a contraction. All the segments witnessed a deflation in prices, except for the Primary Articles. However, on a monthly basis primary articles contracted while Fuel & Power and Manufactured products saw rise in prices.

Core inflation rose in September

India’s WPI based inflation witnessed a further contraction in August. The persistent moderation in WPI since May-22 has been mainly because of constant decline in mostly all the major sub-indices. Although at a slower pace than previous month, this month’s fall in the wholesale prices can be mainly attributed to all the sub-indices except for the primary articles, as food prices (although slowing down) remains in the positive. The deflation in Fuel prices have slowed down as international crude prices have again started to pick up. We expect food prices to cool down in the coming months, all while fuel prices may turn out to put pressure on the headline WPI figures. The core prices remained in deflation for the 7th consecutive month as it fell by 1.4% compared to 2.2% in the month of August.

September’s report clearly shows that the inflationary pressure caused by high food prices have eased down considerably - which clearly indicates a good sign for the market. However, production cut done by Saudi Arabia and Russia could hurt the prices further on the upside. Clearly, the tightness forced by the RBI has started to show, as both core CPI and WPI are on a downtrend, which eliminates the volatile fluctuations of food and energy prices. This report came after the CPI recorded a print of 5.02% for the month of September, which took a detour from the 7.44% it had hit in the month of July.

Narrowed trade deficit a transient respite (Systematix)

India’s trade deficit narrowed in Jul’23 on the back of a sharper decline in imports than exports. But it reflects slowing demand and global trade. As trade was the biggest driver for post-pandemic recovery, the receding global bounties are having a wider impact on the domestic economy, particularly the employment-intensive services sector. While RBI has the buffer in the form of forex assets, the spillovers of external sector vulnerabilities can manifest into volatile currency and rate markets.

Overall trade reflective of slowing global and domestic demand: At the segregated level, the oil trade has been contracting since Mar’23 by 20% (YoY) on average. Non-oil & and non-gold/silver trade has also contracted by 5.9% (YoY) on average since Dec’23. This is reflective of simultaneously slowing global trade and domestic demand.

Contracting services trade has a larger bearing: With the current declining trend of the overall trade since its peak in early 2022, it is going to have a multi-layer cascading impact on the formal sector. Overall services trade and its components, which remain a significant source of formal and informal employment, have started exhibiting signs of moderation or contraction.


 

India strategy: Global headwinds to test domestic resilience (AXIS Capital)

Indian equities should be able to offset some of the downward pressure emerging from the downward adjustment in valuation of global financial assets due to the sharp rise in risk-free rates (UST yields). Not only are inflows into domestic MFs likely to be resilient, EPS growth and revisions are both supportive of time correction. With a cyclical upturn in capital formation supporting the structural improvements in labour and productivity growth, the domestic economy should also be able to offset some of the headwinds from the ongoing global slowdown. A sharp US recession, though, can drive a spike in risk premia and also intensify growth headwinds for the economy.

Structural drivers likely to drive 7% growth annually

We believe India can grow at ~7% annually, with 1% growth in labor input supplementing 2%-plus growth in total factor productivity. We expect strong TFP growth to continue (2.4% CAGR in the five years pre-Covid), on (1) the state continuing to cede space to the private sector (the latter generally uses labour and capital better); (2) improving macro (roads, highways, airports, ports) and micro (last-mile access to energy, piped water, internet and financial services) infrastructure; (3) formalization of retail and construction; (4) net services exports; and (5) state capacity improving.

Improving capital formation to provide cyclical boost, offset headwinds

The pre-Covid growth slowdown was due to a fall in growth of capital formation (bad-loan clean-up and a real-estate downcycle). This is now changing: dwelling construction is picking up, and leverage on corporate balance sheets and lenders has likely bottomed out. These should offset the several cyclical headwinds faced by the economy.

The first is limited fiscal space and a falling fiscal deficit ratio. Second, even with a pause on repo rate hikes, financial conditions can continue to tighten as loans roll over. Third, as the global economic slowdown is already hurting growth in goods and services, a likely US recession next year can intensify pressure in some of the export-driven sectors.

Real-estate cycle turning after a decade-long downturn: No sub-continental sized economy like India can grow rapidly without strength in dwelling construction. Despite 2.4% annual growth in household formation (Exhibit 28:), a houses-to-households ratio of 0.97 in 2019, 4% annual growth in the size of houses (the floor space per person in India is ~100 sq ft, vs 550 in China and 700 in the US, Exhibit 29:), and rising quality of construction, the value of dwelling construction in India barely grew over 2012-21.

Time correction for now: lower global P/Es, and steady EPS growth

The US Treasury (UST) yields have risen 2 pp, and are likely to remain elevated, in our view. With Nifty earnings yield spread over UST yields at record lows, P/E can remain under pressure despite the USD 30-35bn of unintended flows into domestic equity MFs.

P/E premium to world is already elevated at 30%. Markets may time-correct as Nifty earnings are in much better shape than in the past decade: (1) for-the-year EPS seeing upgrades vs sharp 10-25% cuts in the prior decade; and (2) double-digit growth FY24-26E vs 4% CAGR 2011-20. In our 30-stock model portfolio, we are overweight financials, autos, utilities, cement, and real-estate, and underweight IT, industrials, and metals.

US bond yields may remain elevated (MOFSL)

During the past three months, the benchmark 10-year US treasury yield has surged toward 4.75%, about 100bp higher than the mid-Jul’23 level. Notably, the rise in the yield is not limited only to the longer end, but it is seen across the curve and more at the shorter end, as the spread between the 3-month yield and the 10-year yield has actually narrowed from -1.5pp in mid-Jul’23 (and 4-decade low of -1.89pp in early Jun’23) to -0.9pp in Oct’23, last seen in early 2023. (All data used here is as of 16th Oct’23).

If the cost of funds increases sharply and continuously, it is usually believed to hurt borrowers. Nevertheless, since a bulk (~90%) of household loans are fixed-term, higher rates have not pinched customers in the US. Because of this, the burden of higher interest rates will be borne by the lenders, due to the higher cost of roll-over and/or refinancing the loans. On top of this, the financial institutions also see a drop in the value of their securities portfolios due to higher interest rates.

Moreover, although higher rates may not affect existing customers, they are likely to affect new demand badly, hurting home prices. This, if happens, will have the potential to broaden and sharpen the economic slowdown. However, mortgage/non-mortgage loans continue to grow decently, which shows that consumers are not worried so far.

None of these troublesome implications, thus, have played out so far. Our expectation of a serious US slowdown by mid-2023 did not materialize, and even the soft landing theory has been elusive. The US economy remains strong, supported by the drawdown in savings by US consumers, which is in contrast to most other rich nations.

However, this is unlikely to continue for a long period, especially if bond yields stay so elevated. Only ~8% of the market participants expect a rate hike on 1st Nov’23, down from 33% a month ago, and 29% expect it in Dec’23 (up from 2.3% a month ago). It means that the majority of participants would be surprised if the US Federal Reserve delivers another rate hike, like they projected in their Sep’23 policy meeting.

We believe that even if the Fed does not hike rates in the next meeting, it cannot afford to loosen its stance. If so, bond yields will remain elevated, and the longer they stay high, the higher the risk of an economic slowdown is. Accordingly, we push our expectation of a US economic slowdown into 1HCY24.

Unrealized losses of the financial institutions have surged

If the cost of funds increases sharply and continuously, it is usually believed to hurt borrowers. Nevertheless, since a bulk (~90%) of household loans are fixed-term, higher rates have not pinched customers. Because of this, the burden of higher interest rates will be borne by lenders, due to the higher cost of roll-over and/or refinancing the loans. On top of this, financial institutions also see a drop in the value of their securities portfolios due to higher interest rates.

According to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the unrealized losses on investment securities of all the FDIC-insured institutions in the US have amounted to close to or more than USD500b during the past five quarters. Since the Fed started hiking interest rates in Mar’22, unrealized gains have disappeared (from USD29.4b in 3QCY21) and large losses (totaling USD558b in 2QCY23) have emerged. The unrealized losses are divided in the ratio of 45:55 between available-for-sale (AFS) and held-to-maturity (HTM) securities portfolios.

We are not suggesting that all these losses will be realized. However, it is probable that some institutions may be forced to unwind their positions unwillingly, making it economically very difficult for them to survive. Overall, it may not bring down the entire financial sector, but it definitely holds the potential to send chills. Of course, timely intervention by an extremely active US Fed could change the course.

Steel demand to grow slower than expected (Centrum)

World steel association in its October 2023 outlook revised steel demand growth estimate to 1.8% in 2023 and reach 1,814.5mt downgrading from 2.3% YoY earlier. As steel using key sectors like infrastructure and construction witnessing impact of high inflation and high interest rate leading to slowdown in both investment as well as consumption. However, recovery in auto production continued in 2023, helped by order backlog and easing of bottlenecks resulting high growth for most regions. For CY24, world steel demand is expected to show 1.9% YoY growth led by demand improvement in World ex China.

China - The real estate sector have shown state of weakness as key indicators like land sales, housing sales and new construction starts continued to fall in 2023. However, government infrastructure spending stood as major driver for steel demand. As a result, steel demand is expected to rebound by 2% YoY at 939mt in CY23 after fall of 3.5% in CY22. The various measures undertaken by the government should lead to stabilisation in property sector. Hence, under this assumption, the steel demand for CY24 is expected to sustain at CY23 level.

India - India remains bright spot in the global steel industry benefiting from surge in construction and infrastructure sector driven by government spending as well as recovery in private investment. After growing by 9% in CY22, demand is expected to show healthy growth of 8.6% in CY23 and 7.7% in CY24.

US - Despite the resilience of the US economy to steep interest hikes, steel using sectors are feeling demand slowing down. Particularly, residential construction is affected, which is expected to contract in 2023 and 2024. Manufacturing has been also slowing, but the automotive sector is expected to continue its post-pandemic recovery. The lagged effect of tight monetary policy points to downside risk for 2024. After a fall of 2.6% in 2022, steel demand is expected to decline by 1.1% in 2023 and then grow by 1.6% in 2024.

European Union and UK - In CY23, EU economy stood stronger than expected to able to manage energy crisis arising from the Russia-Ukraine war. The high interest rates and energy costs had heavy effect on manufacturing activities. Though, recovery in automotive sector continued. The steel demand after a fall of 7.8% in 2022, is expected to fall by 5.1% in 2023. Although in CY24, demand is expected to see rebound as impact of current adversaries likely to cool off.

View & Outlook: Developing nations to spearhead global steel demand

Overall, worsening economic outlook due to influence of monetary tightening that hurt consumption and investment alike. The construction sector has been negatively affected by the high interest rates and high-cost environment, especially the residential sector. Falling housing sales have led to financial troubles for major Chinese real estate developers, generating concerns about the health of the economy. For CY2024, auto sector growth likely to decelerate, China to remain uncertain depending on the policy direction to tackle economic difficulties, regional conflicts such as Russia-Ukraine, Israel-Palestine and elsewhere further add to downside risk. Steel demand dynamics in emerging and developing economies continue to diverge, with developing nations excluding China remaining resilient to global headwinds. After falling by 0.6% in 2022, steel demand in emerging and developing economies excluding China will show growth of 4.1% in 2023 and 4.8% in 2024.

India metals - Earnings to be a mixed bag (Systematix)

India’s steel production and demand remained strong for a seasonally slow quarter. Domestic crude steel production increased by 15% YoY during July-August 2023 while other major economies witnessed a decline over the same period. Various economic indicators also signal strong demand from the infrastructure, building and construction, and automotive sectors, a trend likely to gain momentum in 2HFY24. Prices of major base metals fell during 2QFY24, with zinc/aluminium recording a decline of 25.7%/8.6% YoY and 4.5%/5.2% QoQ. Lead and copper prices were relatively resilient at USD 2,170/t (+9.8%/+2.5% YoY/QoQ) and USD 8,356/t (+7.9%/-1.5% YoY/QoQ), respectively. Silver/gold prices slid lower by 2.5%/2.7% QoQ but remained higher by 22.6%/13.3% on a YoY basis, respectively.

Primary steel producers under our coverage (JSW Steel, SAIL, and Tata Steel) are estimated to report a 3%/1% YoY/QoQ drop in 2QFY24 revenue due to lower steel prices and seasonal factors. However, despite seasonality, the EBITDA margin is likely to remain stable driven by higher volumes and lower raw material costs.

Strong domestic demand is likely to keep the earnings buoyant for JSW Steel and Tata Steel, partially offsetting the impact of lower sales volume estimated at their respective international operations. We estimate strong sales and EBITDA recovery for SAIL driven by 13%/5% YoY/QoQ growth in 2QFY24 reported production.

Mining companies MOIL, NMDC, and Coal India are likely to report a YoY EBITDA growth of 28% driven by strong operational performance. APL Apollo Tubes (APAT) and Surya Roshni (SYR) are estimated to report EBITDA growth of 29% and 19% YoY, respectively, driven by high-margin value-added product portfolio and higher volumes partially offsetting lower steel prices. For our non-ferrous coverage (Hindustan Zinc, Vedanta, and NALCO), we estimate a YoY/QoQ drop of 21%/3% in EBITDA reflecting the movement in base metal prices. Overall, we estimate 2QFY24 EBITDA of our metals and mining universe to increase by 13% YoY but decline by 5% QoQ. We currently have BUY on SAIL, TATA, JSTL, MOIL, NALCO, SYR, NMDC, COAL, and VEDL, and HOLD on APAT, and HZL.

Strong domestic demand: India reported a 17% YoY growth in monthly crude steel production in August 2023, and remains one of the few countries globally to consistently record growth in steel production. India’s September 2023 manufacturing PMI came in at 57.5, above the neutral level of 50 for the 27th consecutive month, indicating strong order intake and sustaining demand.

The latest Index of Industrial Production (IIP) data for manufacturing activity in basic metals also indicated a strong demand scenario, as it increased to 215 in August 2023 vs 207.7 in July 2023 (2011 as the base year). Strong demand, increasing volumes, and lower raw material costs are likely to outweigh the impact of lower steel prices and help key ferrous companies maintain EBITDA margins during the quarter. We believe, earnings have already witnessed a significant pullback in 1QFY24 as key metal prices normalised from the record levels breached during the same period last year and, going forward, higher volume-enabled operating leverage will ensure margin sustenance while higher demand keeps prices in check.

Rising exports disaffirm overcapacity risk in China; will likely keep steel prices

rangebound

Steel demand from the property sector in China, largest steel producing country, remained subdued during the quarter slashing hopes of a faster economic recovery. However, expected steel production cuts have not materialized as well due to an offsetting demand from the infrastructure and manufacturing sectors. China’s PMI data showed expansion in September 2023, after recording a contraction in manufacturing activity for two consecutive months. Lack of domestic demand from the property sector has also led to a rise in steel exports from China. During April-July 2023, China produced 364.6mt of crude steel, a marginal increase of 0.36% from last year. Over the same period, exports of finished steel to India increased by 27% and 58% YoY in value and volume terms, respectively. We believe, China is likely to take milder production cuts for the rest of the year due to concerns over economic growth that would keep exports high and inventories at a comfortable level thus providing downside support to steel prices.


Thursday, October 19, 2023

Winds of change

In the past 6 years, several significant events have occurred that would shape the new global order in the next decade or two. I would particularly like to mention the following ten events that in my view could potentially prove to be transformative for the global order:

1.    Incorporation of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) into the Constitution of the Chinese Communist Party. (2017)

2.    Abolition of time limits, allowing Xi Jinping to remain General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and chairman of the Central Military Commission for life. (2018) (After winning an overwhelming majority in the 2020 elections, Russian President Vladimir Putin is also eligible to stay in office until 2036.)

3.    The Exit of the UK from the common European market (the EU) (2017-2020); and the elevation of the first non-white person (Rishi Sunak) to the office of Prime Minister of the UK in 2022.

4.    The beginning of the latest round of trade war between the US and China. (2018)

5.    The tariff war between the EU and US. (2018)

6.    The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, allegedly from a laboratory in Wuhan province of China, and consequent breakdown of global supply chains. (2020)

7.    Exit of the US forces from Afghanistan, handing over the regime to the Taliban (2021)

8.    Invasion of Ukraine by Russia and subsequent economic sanctions on Russia. (2022)

9.    Signing of a strategic partnership agreement between China and Saudi Arabia (2022)

10. Massive attack on Israeli civilians by Hamas and subsequent retaliation by Israeli defense forces killing thousands in Palestinian territory in the Gaza Strip. The attack divided the world with Western allies extending support to Israel and Russia, China, and Arab League nations uniting in support of Palestine. (2023)

I feel that each of the above-stated events, along with many other events occurring simultaneously, has added to the momentum of change in the global order that had been in existence since the early 1970s.

It may still be early days to project how the new world order would look like. Nonetheless, it seems reasonable to assume that the global economy may get a significant impetus from the rebalancing. The realignment of trade balances; localization of manufacturing; redistribution of population; and renewed focus on finding/developing new materials, technologies, and methods to promote sustainability may usher in a new industrial revolution.

Notwithstanding the labor pain that the transition would inevitably entail, the new world order would be much better, as has always been the case.

I think young investors need to evaluate the recent events and their likely impact on their investment strategies. I would be happy to share my thoughts on these events in the coming weeks.

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Policy paralysis – UPA vs NDA-2

 Continuing from yesterday…(see here)

In the enterprise world, new ideas or innovations are usually valued much higher than the ability to execute such ideas. I believe for a successful enterprise both ideation as well as execution are equally important. The question of execution would not arise if there is no idea to execute. Similarly, an idea, howsoever innovative and brilliant it is, would remain just a thought or piece of paper unless it is executed well. Nonetheless, since the idea is the starting point of any enterprise, the innovator deserves to get a relatively higher valuation.

Taking this further, in the realm of politics and governance, the two key components of good governance are:

(i)    Conceiving, formulating, and instituting policies that would ensure inequitable, sustainable, and accelerated socio-economic development and growth.

(ii)   Execution of instituted policies through a set of structured programs, efficient delivery modules, and effective & prompt review and corrective mechanisms.

I believe that the performance of any government must be evaluated on these two parameters.

As I mentioned yesterday (see here), I find that the previous UPA government under the leadership of Dr. Manmohan Singh scored excellently on the issue of conceiving, formulating, and instituting policies that would aid in achieving accelerated, sustainable, and equitable growth. A high rate of GDP growth, especially in light of the global financial crisis, and the challenges of running a government with the support of a large coalition comprising parties with divergent ideologies and agenda underlines the efficiency of execution. The policies not only helped the Indian economy navigate safely through the global financial crisis and a subsequent current account crisis; but also helped bring a record number of people out of poverty.

Now, if we were to assess the performance of the incumbent government under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi on these two parameters, I strongly believe that the current government has performed very well on the execution front. This government has definitely—

(i)    Executed policies instituted by the preceding government like MNREGA, UIDAI, RTE, Food Security, DBT, financial inclusion, FDI in retail trade, infrastructure development etc. rather efficiently;

(ii)   Devised good programs and delivery modules for the policies formulated during the last years of the UPA government like digitization payments, GST, Direct Tax Code, implementation of 14th finance commission recommendations, etc.

(iii)  Augmented many policies like Unique identity and digital payments brilliantly to exploit maximum benefits out of these policies.

This strong execution helped the Indian economy navigate through the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent global slowdown very well. Despite all challenges, India remains the fastest-growing major economy in the world. The programs like Unified Payment Interface (UPI) have become extremely popular globally. Road network development is happening at an accelerated pace. Many large infrastructure projects that were stuck due to a variety of reasons are getting completed.

However, insofar as conceiving new ideas and policies is concerned the performance of the incumbent government is ordinary. In the past nine years hardly any new idea has been conceived and/or converted into policy and programs.

NITI Aayog – the Think Tank

One of the earliest policy decisions taken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi led government at the center was to disband the planning commission and constitute a new Commission to provide directional and policy inputs to the government.

The commission, named NITI Aayog, was formed through a resolution of the Union Cabinet on 1 January 2015. NITI Aayog is “the premier policy think tank of the Government of India, providing directional and policy inputs. Apart from designing long-term policies and programmes for the Government of India, NITI Aayog also provides relevant strategic and technical advice to the Centre, States, and Union Territories. NITI Aayog acts as the quintessential platform for the Government of India to bring States to act together in national interest and thereby foster cooperative federalism.”

A careful reading of the latest Annual Report (2022-23v) of the NITI Aayog suggests that the Aayog has focused more on the review and assessment function and less on thinking and policymaking function.

As per the report, the government has implemented only one noteworthy development policy namely Aspirational District Program (including Aspirational Block Program).

In the first five years of this program (2017-2022) “the programme has acted as a successful template of good and effective governance, Under this programme India’s 112 backward districts have shown remarkable progress across key sectors that matter to the people. The core strength of the programme is its focus on data driven governance that drives evidence-based policy interventions at the district-level. NITI Aayog monitors the 112 Aspirational districts on Key Performance Indicators (KPI) on a monthly basis. The KPIs are designed in a way that the input and process indicators are being evaluated so as to achieve desirable outputs and outcomes across major socio-economic themes such as health & nutrition, education, agriculture & water resources, financial inclusion & skill development, and basic infrastructure. The robust monitoring strategy has enabled the district administration to engage in cross-departmental reviews and thus drive convergence. The competition through the monthly release of delta ranks keeps the districts constantly motivated to improve the KPIs.”

The achievements under the National Monetization Pipeline programs and Production Linked Initiatives (which are restructured models of old policy initiatives) are below par.

Besides this, New Education Policy is under implementation and Integrated Health Policy is under consideration.

Mission LiFE – Lifestyle for Environment is mostly at the conception stage.

In my assessment, the incumbent government has in fact performed less than ordinary on the policymaking front, while scoring well on execution.

I shall be happy to receive views of the readers on this aspect. 

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Policy paralysis – UPA vs NDA

“Policy paralysis” of the preceding Dr Manmohan Singh led UPA government was one of the main planks of PM Modi’s election campaign in 2013-2014. The business community, middle classes, and poor, all were convinced that the UPA government suffers from a severe degree of inertia in policymaking and is therefore responsible for the poor growth of the Indian economy. It was alleged that large-scale and blatant corruption, nepotism (lack of meritocracy), and weak leadership are the primary reasons for the “policy paralysis” and poor execution.

The campaign against the incumbent government was so effective that it swayed the big industrialists and SMEs which directly benefited from the government’s developmental efforts; the poor who benefited tremendously from the transformative social initiatives; and the middle classes who were protected from any potential collateral damage from the global financial crisis and events in its aftermath, against the government.

In their disappointment with the then incumbent government, few consider allowing the government any concession for-

(i)      The global financial crisis (GFC) of 2008-09 threatened to push the global economy into the worst condition since the great depression of the 1930s. The Indian economy still managed to grow over 7% during the five-year (FY10-FY14) period post-GFC, notwithstanding the challenging global conditions.

(ii)     A high base effect. The Indian economy had its best phase during 2004-2011; growing over 8% CAGR. Despite such a high base effect and global slowdown, the Indian economy was still growing by over 7% in 2014.

(iii)   The several major policy decisions taken by the UPA government, having a transformative impact on India’s socio-economic milieu. For example—

·         Employment Guarantee (MNREGA) through enactment of Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005.

·         Food Security for 81 crore poor people through National Food Security Act, (NFSA) 2013

·         Right to Education for all children between the age of 6-14 through The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009. (It is pertinent to note that through the 86th amendment to the Constitution of India in 2002, Article 21A was inserted in the Indian constitution to make Education a fundamental Right.).

·         Right to Information through enactment of the Right to Information Act 2005.

·         Financial Inclusion- provision of banking facilities to all 73,000 habitations having a population of over 2,000 by FY12, using appropriate technologies.

·         Unique Identity for all citizens (Aadhar) through the implementation of Aadhaar and Other Laws (Amendment) Act 2009. Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), has been officially acknowledged as a legislative authority, since July 12, 2016, in accordance with the Aadhaar Act 2016.

·         Digitization of payments through incorporation of National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) was incorporated in 2008 as an umbrella organization for operating retail payments and settlement systems in India. NPCI facilitates transformative payment solutions like UPI, Bharat Bill Pay, FasTag, and Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT).

·         FDI in retail trade.

·         Civil Nuclear Deal with the US allowing India entry into elite clubs as a key strategic partner.

·         Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013 to facilitate faster execution of infrastructure projects and minimize litigation in the acquisition of land.

·         Deregulation of transportation fuel prices and eliminating kerosene subsidies that had adversely impacted the fiscal balance of the central government for decades.

·         Including reforms in tax sharing formula between states and center in scope of 14th Finance Commission (set up in 2013 and recommendation accepted in February 2015) to improve state and center relationships and allow states more autonomy.

·         UPA government also proposed a uniform Goods and Service Tax (GST) in 2007 and a Direct Tax Code later. However, these could not be implemented due to different views of the opposition ruled states.

Instead, some unsubstantiated allegations of mega corruption dominated the narrative and overwhelmed the voters’ sentiment.

It is pertinent to note that some hypothetical charges of corruption in the allocation of 2G spectrum and coal mines raised in CAG reports were blown out of proportion and eventually led to the cancellation of 122 telecom licenses in 2012 and 204 coal blocks in 2014 by the Supreme Court. Notably, in 2017 a special CBI court acquitted everyone accused in the 2G spectrum case stating that the prosecution had failed to prove any charge against any of the accused, made in its well-choreographed charge sheet. Nonetheless, the cancellation of licenses and coal blocks led to the bankruptcies of some entities, causing massive losses to their lenders.

In my view, therefore, it is particularly important to evaluate the performance of the incumbent government in relation to “policymaking”; because good policies have the potential to catapult the economy into a higher growth orbit. Execution of policies and programs indubitably helps in sustaining the momentum, but innovative policies are key to growth acceleration and socio-economic transformation.

...to continue tomorrow

Thursday, October 12, 2023

Assessing systemic sustainability risk to Indian markets

 The traders and investors, who directly access the trading platforms of brokers, are reminded and forced to acknowledge, every time they log in to the trading system, “9 out of 10 individual traders in the Equity Futures and Options Segment, incurred net losses”. This is in fact one of the conclusions of a study conducted by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) (published in January 2023). From my study of the Indian stock markets in the past three decades, I understand that this conclusion is no exaggeration.

This state of affairs raises two pertinent questions:

(i)      How sustainable a market is where 90% of participants are losing money consistently?

(ii)     Does not this pose a material systemic risk for our markets, especially under the present circumstances where the global financial and geopolitical conditions are worsening every day, and the probability of an eight-sigma event like 9/11 attack and Lehman Collapse etc. is increasing?

Sustainability of market

In my view, the fact that about 90% of the participants are losing money consistently does not pose any risk whatsoever to the sustainability of the markets.

(a)   There is strong empirical evidence to suggest that a large number of traders on the losing side may have actually aided the market growth in the past twenty-three years.

·         The derivative segment turnover at the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) has grown from Rs2365cr in FY01 to a staggering Rs3,82,22,86,018cr in FY23 – a CAGR of 91.4%. In simple terms almost doubling every year from the previous year for 23 years.

·         The transaction cost incurred by the ever-rising derivative traders has evidently contributed materially to the development of the capital markets. Brokers have been able to invest significant capital in technology and trading infrastructure, The regulator has also earned a tremendous amount of fees, enabling it to invest in technology and investor protection & education programs; the National Stock Exchange has become one of the most valuable financial service corporations.

(b)   This 10:90 ratio has been true ever since the financial markets came into existence in India. While doing research for my PhD during the early 2000s, I discovered that about 90% of the Indian households participating in the stock markets were actually not serious investors. They would “bet” some money on some random stock to test their luck. They seldom differentiated between buying a lottery ticket, a roll of dice in a casino, and buying stock of a company. However, since the amount of ‘bet” is usually very small in relation to their networth, a loss of 100% of their bet never deters them from testing their luck repeatedly.

(c)    Moreover, over the years the “investment” part of their exposure to the securities market has become increasingly institutionalized. In the past 10 years, the share of retail investors in the total NSE turnover has reduced from over 55% to close to 40% now.

Systemic risk

The rise in derivative turnover and a large number of traders losing money may not be contributing much to the systemic risk of the Indian stock markets. In the past two decades, the Indian markets have been best regulated and safest amongst the global peers. In fact, the Indian market was perhaps the only major market globally that did not impose any trading restrictions, or face any closure or trading halt, during the global financial crisis or during Covid-19 pandemic.

We have hardly seen moves of more than 3% on a daily closing basis in the past 5 years. Despite all the global noise and domestic issues, the implied volatility index (VIX) is persisting at its lowest level.

There are two key reasons for this remarkable stability in our markets.

(i)    Indian markets follow one of the strictest margining systems in the world. The chances of a contagion, in case any market participant defaults, are negligible. Besides, the regulators have also implemented a very extensive surveillance mechanism to identify and control unusual movements in stocks.

(ii)  
The composition of market activity has materially changed since the global financial crisis days when 3-5% daily moves in the index were not uncommon. In FY08 prior to the global financial crisis, the single stock futures (inarguably the most risky derivative product) comprised 58% of the total derivative segment turnover, where the safest product index options were just 10%. In FY23 Index options were 97.7% of the derivative segment turnover, while stock futures were just 0.5%. Obviously, the systemic risk is now minimal. The potential losses are very well defined and adequately provided for through margins.



To conclude, I am not worried about any systemic or sustainability risk to Indian markets. However, I am also not sure about the utility of the warning flashed on trading screens at every login. To deter people from stretching their luck too much and losing money consistently, much more serious efforts and paradigm shifts would be needed. 



Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Manufacturing a status quo bias

 In a paper published in 1988 researchers William Samuelson and Richard Zeckhauser highlighted that a large majority of people have a cognitive bias against change in their present conditions. In their research, they found that “people show a disproportionate preference for choices that maintain the status quo.” They referred to this trait of human behavior as “status quo bias”. Several other researchers have added subsequently to the findings of Samuelson and Zeckhauser.

In my personal life, I have noticed several instances of status quo bias whether it is ordering in a restaurant, making investment decisions, buying vehicles, choosing healthcare professionals, or even voting in the elections.

I find that status quo bias is particularly strong during periods of stress or crisis. I have observed that during periods of stress or crisis (actual or perceived) people generally avoid trying new things, people, or places, etc. They prefer to trust their existing captain when the waters become rough, rather than preferring a change of guards.

The politicians world over perhaps recognized this cognitive bias of people a long time ago and internalized this in their election strategy books. In this age of social media, where information (especially falsehood) spreads faster than sunlight, they often manufacture crises to distract people from real issues and nudge them to maintain status quo, i.e., keep the extant establishments in power.

The reaction of many heads of government, e.g., the US, the UK, France, India etc., to the latest attacks of the Palestinian Hamas Militia on Israeli territories and people indicates their eagerness to shift the popular narrative away from the domestic problems to a distant localized geopolitical event, which may or may not have material implications for their domestic constituencies. To the naked eye, it appears that they are manufacturing a crisis that does not exist just to distract the attention of their domestic constituency and invoke their cognitive status quo bias.

The US economy is struggling to manage the mountains of debt it has accumulated in the past three years; elevated inflation that is hurting the household budgets badly; rising homelessness; rising crimes and drug abuse; crashing ratings of the incumbent President; an apparently clueless central bank; rising discontentment over its policy to fund Ukraine’s war efforts; and diminishing clout over global policy-making (especially in light of the total failure of economic sanctions on Russia and dismal impact of its tariff war with China), pensioners and savers staring at huge losses on their bond portfolios; and financial system placed precariously as MTM losses on their treasury holding climb (eroding their reserves), household delinquencies rising and corporate bankruptcies also rising ominously.

The situation in the UK and France is no different. It may actually be worse than the US, as any visitor to the cities of London and Paris would tell you about the collapse of civic infrastructure, and the rise in homelessness, petty crime, and racial slurs.

Back home, I find that “Hamas” and “Israel” are trending in all social media ahead of the Cricket ODI World Cup. This explains the kind of frenzy created to distract people from core issues that affect their day-to-day lives. Our government seems to have changed our long held Middle East policy of equidistance from both Israel and Palestine, without any discussion or offering any explanation, totally disregarding the fact that it could have serious implications for our energy security and internal security.

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Watch those Spread Sheet closely

 Last weekend the already tense situation escalated materially in the Israel-occupied Gaza Strip area of the Palestinian state. Apparently, the Hamas controlled militia launched a massive ariel and ground attack on Israeli territories, killing over 700 people and injuring many more, including several civilians - women and children. In retaliation, Israeli forces attacked the Palestinian territories in the Gaza Strip, killing over 300 people, including women and children, and destroying several civilian targets. This is the deadliest episode since 1967, in the conflict that started in the late 1940s.

The government of Israel has formally declared war on Hamas, committing to a “mighty vengeance” and “a long and difficult war.” They have received support and solidarity from all their traditional allies like NATO members, Australia, and strategic partners like India. As per the latest reports 84 nations have issued formal statements supporting Israel’s right to self-defense. On the other hand, Hamas has also received open support from Islamic countries like Iran, Qatar, and Lebanon.

Not surprisingly, two major countries – Russia and China – have not openly taken any side in the recent escalations. After being nudged by the US, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson stated that "the fundamental way out of the conflict lies in implementing the two-state solution and establishing an independent State of Palestine" while urging the relevant parties to remain calm and end hostilities against civilians".

Russia also expressed its support for an independent Palestinian state within the borders of 1967. "We regard the current large-scale escalation as another extremely dangerous manifestation of a vicious circle of violence resulting from a chronic failure to comply with the corresponding resolutions of the UN and its Security Council and the blocking by the West of the work of the Middle East Quartet of international mediators made up of Russia, the United States, the EU, and the UN," Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson said.

The war is also being seen as a setback to the fast-improving Israel-Saudi relationship. In an official statement, The Saudi foreign ministry stated, “The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is closely following the developments of the unprecedented situation between a number of Palestinian factions and the Israeli occupation forces, which has resulted in a high level of violence on several fronts there.” The statement recalled, “its repeated warnings of the dangers of the explosion of the situation as a result if the continued occupation, the deprivation of the Palestinian people of the legitimate rights, and the repetition of the systematic provocation against the sanctities” and renewed “the call of the international community to assume its responsibilities and activate a credible peace process that leads to the two-state solution to achieve security and peace in the region and protect civilians.”

Arab League representatives are reportedly visiting Russia for further discussions on the matter.

Many readers and friends have asked for my views on the latest episode of the Israel-Palestine conflict and its likely impact on the financial markets. I claim no knowledge of global strategic affairs, politics, or international relations. Nonetheless, I am happy to share what I see as an observer of current affairs and a student of financial markets. Many may find these thoughts as naïve. Notwithstanding I feel strongly about my view and would like to hold these till I see any strong evidence of the contrary emerging.

In my view, as of this morning, the world is divided more than ever on the issue of the rights of the Palestinian people, Israel’s right to self-defense, and the legitimacy of violence against civilians on both sides.

I believe that the latest escalation may be just another manifestation of the wider trend of the rebalancing of the world order that had evolved after the Second World War and was particularly dominated by the US and its strategic allies since the disintegration of the USSR in 1991.

The unified Germany (that dominates the European Union), China (the leading force in the global economy and strategic sphere), Russia (the traditional US enemy), Saudi Arab (looking to free itself from petrodollar dominance), and Iran (striving to unshackle its economy from the US influenced economic sanctions), etc. have been actively striving to enhance their influence in a mostly unipolar world.

China’s Belt and Road Initiative and China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, Russia’s occupation of Crimea in 2017 and invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Iran’s open support to Hamas, and Saudi Arabia’s decision to initiate Yuan trade with China and INR trade with India are some of the many initiatives taken to rebalance the unipolar world order.

The recent Hamas attacks on Israel appear just an extension of these initiatives. The intensity of Hamas attacks is clearly aimed at highlighting that (a) Israel (and Mossad) may not be as invincible as it has been made out to be. Of course, Israel would retaliate strongly to protect this perception, inflicting devastating injuries to Hamas; (b) The US (and CIA) has been totally ineffective in the Afghanistan and Ukraine conflicts and would lose many more points in its standing as the unchallenged global strategic leader.

Notably, unlike the past instances, there is significant civilian support for Palestine in countries like the US, UK and France. This could also result in the hardening of right-wing stand on the policies regarding immigration and refugees in these countries, further diminishing their acceptance as global leaders.

Obviously, the conflict will not only intensify but avoid any sustainable resolution till the larger issue of global rebalancing is addressed.

Insofar as the financial markets are concerned, this will just add to the extant level of uncertainty and volatility. The mountains of debt, rising borrowing costs, still elevated inflation and faltering growth are keeping the global financial markets jittery. This escalation could add to this jitteriness, especially if it causes a sharp spike in crude oil prices or disrupts global trade, especially the movement of cargo through the Suez Canal.

It would be highly imprudent, in my view, to believe that the Indian economy and financial markets will escape the damage, especially when the stress on fiscal and current account balances is already visible and RBI has cautioned about inflation in its latest policy statement. A 25bps hike in policy rates from here could materially disturb many Excel sheets.

Friday, October 6, 2023

Some notable research snippets of the week

Economic Outlook (CARE Ratings)

Global economy

·         Global growth is projected to moderate to 3% in 2023 from an estimated 3.5% in 2022 according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

·         Global Inflation is projected to moderate to 6.8% in 2023 from 8.7% in 2022., however, it is still elevated compared to the pre-pandemic (2017-19) level of 3.5%.

·         Inflation though moderating continues to stay above the Central bank targets, warranting interest rates staying higher for longer.

·         In the September policy meeting, US Fed opted to keep the policy rate unchanged but offered a hawkish guidance indicating one more rate hike in 2023 and fewer rate cuts in 2024.

·         Global supply chains have normalized. However, weak domestic demand in China are keeping global commodity prices muted. Crude oil prices have also been volatile.

·         Bank of England held interest rates unchanged for the first time since December 2021, keeping borrowing costs at their highest level since 2008.

·         European Central Bank hiked rates by 25-basis points marking the tenth consecutive rate increase and taking the deposit rate to a record high of 4%.

·         Going ahead, the cumulative impact of volatile crude oil prices, demand-supply mismatch in China, further rate hikes, and geopolitical risks remain the key monitorables.

Indian economy

·         India’s GDP rose by 7.8% in Q1 FY24 from a growth of 6.1% last quarter, aided by a supportive base, healthy services growth and sustained momentum in manufacturing and construction sectors. CareEdge Ratings projects full year GDP growth to be at 6.5% in FY24 as against 7.2% in FY23.

·         In the coming quarters, GDP growth is expected to moderate due to base normalization. We project full year GDP growth to be at 6.5% in FY24 as against 7.2% in FY23.

·         CPI inflation high at 6.8% in August on account of elevated food prices; core inflation moderated to 4.9% Y-o-Y in August 2023.

·         High-frequency economic indicators such as GST collections, E-way bills, PMIs and bank credit point towards healthy economic activity.

·         On the external front, merchandise exports continue to feel the heat of global demand slowdown and trade deficit has shown signs of widening in the recent months.

·         Overall, healthy domestic economic activity and comfortable current account deficit at 1.8% signal resilience in the domestic economy.

·         However, resurfacing of inflationary pressures, especially food inflation, weather-related uncertainties and external spillovers remain the key watchouts.


 

August tax collections put fiscal risks at bay (ELARA Capital)

Tax revenue sees a sharp rebound; aiding Centre’s capex push

The Centre’s gross tax revenue rose by 16.5% in Apr-August FY24 vs a paltry 2.8% during Apr-July FY24 as corporate taxes rebounded allowing for continued front-loading of capital expenditure. Capital expenditure grew by 48.1% during first five months of the fiscal year to INR 3.74tn or 37.3% of BE – highest post covid.

The capital expenditure continued to be led by roads and railways with more than 42% and 47% of the budgeted amount being spent in the first five months respectively. Revenue expenditure grew by 14.09% this year vs ~3% during the same period last year, recording the highest pace of growth in last five years as spending on subsidies especially fertilizers picked pace. Overall fiscal deficit remained contained at 36% of BE during April-Aug FY24 vs 32.6% of BE in FY23.

See no fiscal slippages in FY24; inflows in small savings encouraging

If the current trend of revenue is sustained, we see no fiscal slippage despite the expected shortfall in disinvestment revenue (INR 350 bn). The disinvestment proceeds shortfall would be adequately compensated by the gains in non-tax revenue. Likewise, the LPG subsidy of INR 200 per cylinder can be comfortably financed by the tax on windfall profits of upstream companies leading to no additional burden on the exchequer.

The interest subsidy under the PM Vishwakarma Scheme is likely to be spread over four years and hence doesn’t entail significant burden this financial year.

With the rural incomes likely to be under stress in the run up to the state and general elections, we do not rule out additional spending to provide relief to the poor. Under the current arithmetic of government finances, should a relief up to INR 400 bn be announced for rural India, we see the upside to fiscal deficit of 15-20 bps.

With flows under small savings remaining robust, the additional spending can comfortably be funded through higher borrowing from small savings fund and/or higher T-bill issuance. Between April-August this fiscal, small savings collections rose by ~ 48%, helping the government mop-up INR 1.6 tn which is 34% of this year’s budget estimate. At this pace, it is likely the government may exceed its budget estimate of INR 4.71 tn from small savings collection.

Continue to hold our call for 10-year yield at 6.9% by March 2024E

An expected lower supply from States (as actual capex spending is likely to be lower than budgeted) and normalization of inflation as well as encouraging FII inflows into the debt market especially in the run up to inclusion in JP Morgan Emerging Market Global Bond Index are likely to create conducive conditions for India’s GSEC yield to moderate to below 7.0% by March 2024E.

We see FY24E-end 10-year yield in the range of 6.9-7.1% with a move towards sub 7% by March 2024.

State of Infrastructure (ICICI Securities)

Electricity demand: Grew by 16% YoY (5M at 6% YoY)

Electricity demand grew by 16% YoY in Aug-23 and the 5M print is at 6%. We believe a sharp rise in demand could be explained by cooling and agricultural demand led by weak monsoon activity.

Road: Fastag collections grew 22% YoY (5M at 22% YoY)

Tag users surged 31% YoY to 75mn as of Aug-23. Monthly volumes for Fastags grew 13% YoY to 308mn.

Railways: Grew by 2% YoY (5M declined by 2% YoY)

Railway cargo grew to 75k ntkm in Aug-23, while 5MFY24 cargo volume remained muted with -2% growth till Aug-23 to 367k ntkms. Containers volume grew 16% YoY in Aug-23 to 8k ntkms led by EXIM container growth of 20% YoY. Coal volumes grew 6% in Aug-23 to 60k ntkms. We expect coal volumes to grow at a faster rate in coming months to replenish the feed stock.

Airports: Pax grew by 23% YoY (5M growth at 23% YoY)

Indian airports freight grew 7% YoY (3% MoM) to 279 kTn. Passenger traffic grew 23% YoY (1% MoM) in Aug-23 to 30mn passengers, of which ~20% were international passengers. GMR Airports and Adani Airports had passenger shares of 27% and 24%, respectively. While share of GMR Airports has remained same, Adani Airports share has improved by ~200bps from Aug-22.

Monthly traffic at Delhi, Mumbai and Hyderabad airports grew 19%, 31% and 24% YoY, respectively.

Ports: Cargo grew by 4% YoY (5M at 3% YoY)

Major ports volumes grew 4% YoY in Aug-23 to 65.3mt taking the 5MFY24 figure to 332mt (up 3% YoY). A reduction of 6% in Kandla port’s volumes in the same period was offset by a 5% and 8% increase in JNPT and Paradip port’s volumes, respectively.

Container terminal volumes grew 8% YoY

5MFY24 container terminal volumes stood at 6.5mn TEU (up 7% YoY). Growth was led by Adani Ports, which grew 11% while JNPT grew ~1%. Share of Adani Ports in total container volumes increased to 65% in Aug-23, from 61% in Jul-23, and to 61% in 5MFY24 versus 59% in 5MFY23.

Automobiles & Components (Kotak Securities)

Domestic PV and 2W wholesales volumes grew by low single digits, ahead of the key festive season. The tractor segment’s volumes remained weak, mainly owing to the weak monsoon in August. Recovery in the export segment remains below expectations, especially in the 2W and tractor segments. Demand trend of the CV segment remains steady, led by strong growth in the M&HCV and passenger carrier segments.

Domestic PV’s wholesale volumes grew low single digits yoy

According to our estimates, the domestic PV industry’s wholesale volumes increased by low single digits yoy and retail volume grew 18% yoy in September 2023 due to a base effect, as Pitru Paksha (Shradh) was in September 2022.

Channel inventory for the PV segment remains around 5-7 weeks ahead of the festive season (Navratri and Diwali). MSIL’s total volumes increased 3% yoy in September 2023, led by 3-5% yoy volume rises in the domestic and export segments. According to our estimates, Maruti Suzuki’s market share stood at ~41.5% (wholesales) in September 2023 ((-)30 bps yoy). Tata Motors reported a 6% yoy volume decline, whereas Hyundai and M&M’s volumes increased 9-20% yoy in September 2023.

Domestic 2W demand remains steady; export segment recovery remains weak

The domestic 2W retail industry’s volumes improved ~22% yoy, led by (1) sustained outperformance of the premium segment and (2) a base effect. Wholesale volumes broadly grew low single digits yoy in September 2023.

Export demand trends remain weak and grew 5% yoy on a low base. HMCL’s volumes increased 3% yoy in September 2023. TVS Motors reported a 6% yoy rise in volumes, led by 8-10% yoy growth in motorcycles and scooters. Royal Enfield’s volumes declined 4% yoy, driven by a 49% yoy decline in export volumes. Bajaj Auto reported flat volume growth yoy in September 2023.

CV segment’s wholesale volumes grew low double digits yoy

According to our estimate, the CV segment’s volumes grew low double digits yoy owing to a strong performance in the MHCV and passenger carrier segments. Retail volumes remained flat yoy. Tata Motors CV volumes improved 13% yoy, led by (1) a 45% yoy increase in the M&HCV segment, (2) a 46% yoy improvement in the buses segment and (3) a 2% yoy improvement in I&LCV, partly offset by a 6% yoy decline in the SCV cargo segment. AL and VECV reported a 9% yoy volume increase.

Domestic tractor segment’s volume print came in below our expectations

According to our estimates, the domestic tractor industry’s volumes declined by low double digits yoy owing to weak monsoon in August. Improved rainfall, increased Kharif sowing, upcoming festive season and better terms of trade should drive a recovery in the tractor segment’s volumes in the coming months. M&M and Escorts’ total tractor volumes declined 11% yoy in September 2023.

IT Services - Demand remains muted; valuations not as much (IIFL Securities)

We expect the Indian IT sector to witness a muted 2QFY24, with CC revenue growth at 1% QoQ. This is because continued macro uncertainty is leading to inaction and hence, a slowdown in discretionary IT spend despite strong deal wins. Cross-currency headwinds are limited to 30bps. Ebit margins will expand by an average ~40bps QoQ, as wage hikes in some companies have been deferred amid favourable supply side. With a focus on cost take-outs, deal-win announcements have picked up in the quarter, which should lead to sequential growth improvement in CY24. However, given the weak 1HFY24, we see companies narrowing down their FY24 revenue guidance to lower end.

Despite a 7% cut in EPS from the peak, NIFTY IT has marginally outperformed the broader markets. Hence, valuations have got re-rated, given the anticipation of pickup in growth in CY24—leaving limited potential upside across the board in near term.

Another subdued quarter; FY24 guidance to be narrowed down: We forecast sector CC revenues to grow modestly at 1% QoQ in 2QFY24, with 30bps headwind coming from CC impact from A-Pac currencies. Continued macro uncertainty is leading to lower discretionary spend and slower deal ramp-ups. In 2Q, midcaps (1.9% QoQ) will continue growing faster than large caps (0.5% QoQ). We expect companies to narrow down FY24 revenue growth guidance to the lower end.

However, CY24 growth can see improvement, as signed but stalled transformation deals as well as increased number of cost take-out deals, start getting ramped up, with clarity on CY24 budgets in 3Q.

Wage-hike deferrals, easing supply to protect margins: We expect sector Ebit margins to expand by 40bps QoQ, as annual wage hikes have been deferred by some companies amid easing supply-side. Net hiring is likely to remain soft in 2Q, as companies look to deploy previously-hired resources and are finding it easier to increase just-in- time hiring. We will watch for: i) 2H revenue and margin outlook ii) Deal-win momentum iii) Gen-AI investments by Indian IT iv) Attrition trends v) Strategy changes and competitive intensity, post the leadership churn vi) Capital allocation.

Medium-term growth outlook intact: We uphold our view that long-term growth rates for the Indian IT sector have reset to a level higher than pre-Covid, as organisations have realised and accelerated the role of tech for survival and growth. Hence, while sector growth will probably decelerate to 4% in FY24ii, it will converge to double-digit growth next year. Near-term stock performance will be driven by commentary on the demand moderation bottoming out. Still, the sector should compound at low teens over the medium term. Given the modest near-term outlook, valuations are a tad rich and poised for time correction. A relatively-better outlook for 2H and the improvement in 2024 IT budgets may drive the stocks higher.

Specialty Chemicals Q2FY24 Preview: Weak demand & pricing (Phillips Capital)

Indian Specialty chemical Industry is all set to deliver one of the worst quarterly performance in Q2 as the Chemical world faces sustained weak demand and production levels falling below COVID (as reflected by PMI of EU, US and China). Additionally, the continued Chinese aggression in terms of dumping impacted the realisations and ultimate earnings. Moreover, the sudden spike in crude prices (yet to get reflected in other inputs) along with no visible sign of demand recovery could continue to keep the mid-term demand outlook uncertain and challenging.

We estimate PC’s Specialty Chemical universe’ is likely to deliver 44% earnings decline (-19% qoq) as the revenues suffers 21% yoy fall (-7% qoq) on account of weak demand and lower product prices and margins corrects 160bps yoy (-110bps qoq) led by weak product mix and negative operating leverage. Amongst PC universe, ATUL will lead the sequential earnings decline with 32% qoq, followed by ARTO (-23%), VO (-17%), SRF (-16%). On yoy basis, all will report sharp earning decline in the range of 36-66% for Q2FY24.

Continued weakness in demand as well as price: The ongoing economic slowdown in Europe (the largest target market for Indian industrial chemicals), inflationary trend in both EU/US (causing decline in consumer demand as well as inventory rationalization by industries) have destroyed overall chemical demand. On the top of that, continued aggressive supply from China (the largest chemical producer of the world) at a time of weak demand situation dragged chemical prices. The demand weakness can also be gauged from the PMI data (weaker than COVID levels) of leading chemical producing countries like US, EU and China (refer page 2).

Softening input prices fails to protect margin and profitability: The key input prices (other than crude), energy cost (Indonesian coal) and freight cost have certainly moderated sequentially but those fail to protect the margin performance of Indian Chemical industry as the final product prices saw faster correction led by aggressive Chinese dumping and the industry suffered negative operating leverage due to weak demand.

In fact, the average input price for Q2 saw the following trend: - crude price (-14%/+9% yoy/qoq), Benzene (-19%/+1% yoy/qoq), Toluene (-17%/-2% yoy/qoq), Phenol (-38%/-18% yoy/qoq), caprolactum (-26%/-13% yoy/qoq), Indonesian coal (-40%/-24% yoy/qoq), etc.

Auto sales – September 2023 (Nirmal Bang)

·         Sales of PVs grew by 3% YoY but declined by 2.5% MoM.

·         2W sales grew by 2% YoY and 11.5% MoM.

·         CV sales grew by 11% YoY and 13% MoM.

·         3W sales grew strongly by 27% YoY but declined by 8% MoM.

·         Tractors sales declined by 11% YoY, but grew by 98% MoM.

 

Auto OEMs in Sept’23 posted good overall performance across PVs, 2Ws and CVs. But, exports for majority of OEMs remained weak. Factory gate dispatches of PVs declined by 2.5% MoM but grew by 3.4% YoY. Demand for entry-level cars declined by 5% MoM and 20% YoY. New model launches will continue to keep competitive intensity high in the UV space. In 2Ws, overall volume grew by 11% MoM and 2% YoY. Tractor sales grew by 98% MoM but declined by 11% YoY. Tractor sales were impacted by postponement of the main festive season this year to 3Q. Going forward, improved rainfall in Sept’23, expectations of a good Kharif harvest, overall healthy macroeconomic factors and positive rural sentiments are expected to boost the momentum in tractor sales during the festive months of Oct-Nov’23.