Here’s wishing everyone a very happy
2017 ahead.
2016 was an interesting year with unprecedented events occurring
especially in the later part of the year. First we had the shocking BREXIT vote
which voted for Britain to separate from Europe, much against conventional
wisdom. Next was another stunner in Trump defeating Clinton, going against most
predictions of an easy Clinton win. And not to be left behind, our honourable
PM Modi outlawed high denomination 5000 and 1000 notes as a war against
corruption, terrorism et al.
These events, occurring in quick
succession have left the markets going nowhere in the last 6 months. So the
recovery which was in sight in October was wiped out by Modi due to the
demonetization effect and the predictions are now for at least 1 or 2 more
quarters (3-6 months) for things to return to the normal as it existed in
October. Whether that actually happens, only time will tell.
On the positive side, we had the GST
Bill moving forward and hopes are still alive that it will see the light of the
day sometime this year though not in April as everyone, except the opposition
parties, wanted it.
This also means that there were at
least 3 opportunities when markets in their usual fashion collapsed in response
to global events, irrespective of the fact that these had no impact whatsoever
in quite a few of the companies which were knocked out of shape. That has been
the speciality of Indian markets for as long as I can remember and there is no
sign that such knee-jerk reactions will end anytime soon.
The Sensex continues to hover around
the 25K mark, about 20% down from the 30K mark that it touched sometime last
year. However, as has been seen in recent years, returns of Sensex have not
been a true reflection of the stock market returns as is widely perceived
theoretically, text-book style. There were many opportunities and there were stocks
which doubled or gave returns in excess of 25-50% in some cases. Quite a few
companies gave bonus shares (ITC, Berger Paints, PFC, Bajaj Finance) indicating
strong confidence of the management in servicing the growing equity, and some
are on their way to announcing it. So as has been said in many fora, India
continues to be a stock pickers’ market and there are enough opportunities in
individual stories to still earn excellent return if money is put in
fundamentally sound stocks with proven managements who have seen teh ups and
downs of business cycles and more importantly navigated them successfully.
The key theme this year in 2017 would
certainly be Digital India and less cash economy (India is still some years
away from cash-less economy whatever pundits may say). So most of my choices
this time around are centred around this theme.
Sterlite Technologies (ST)
This makes it to the list this year
too going by the developments over the last few months which augur acche din
for ST.
What I had written about this stock last
year still holds good. But the recent developments that I am talking about are
the govt’s massive push towards a Digital India and e-payments (and not an
optional one at that) which would necessitate a strong demand for ST’s for a
long time to come.
The second development is that a few
months back, they have demerged their Power products and Transmission Grid business
(manufacturing products such as power conductors and high voltage and extra
high voltage cables and providing turnkey solutions for power industries) into
a separate company, Sterlite Power Transmission (SPT), and intend to focus
completely on telecom business which over last 5 years has grown about 28%
annually. SPT is for now an unlisted company.
The third important development is
the entry of Reliance Jio in India and ST’s major role in this environment.
In 2015, ST acquitted another company
called Elitecore Technologies which is into network management, operations and
billing support as well as customer management products. ST expects the
acquisition to help it look beyond the infrastructure vertical and build new
capacities to fully tap opportunities from projects like Digital India and
smart cities in the local market, and to expand to markets where Elitecore has
a strong presence. ST now has a full end-to-end offering and would be better
placed in creating deeper and longer customer engagements.
ST supplies optical fibre to the
country’s top carriers that include Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio to enable
their ambitious fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) network roll outs, in addition to the
government-driven initiatives such as the Smart City and BharatNet. It is doing
several pilots with telecom service providers. They have also supplied products
for Jio, and hope to have a far deeper engagement with the telco in future.
Airtel is also spending on fibre as part of Project Leap.
These initiatives as well as govt’s
moves have created a strong platform for ST to take off from here. Expect this
company to do well over the next few years as there are very few companies in
India currently who can match it in its offerings.
Currently trading around 96, this can
very well give returns anywhere from 25% upwards annually over the next few
years, if all the above things play out as planned.
Bharat Electronics (BE)
With Digital India as the govt’s
recent motto, BE is likely to be one of the major beneficiaries as they are one
of the leading producers of digital devices such as PoS terminals, swipe card
machines etc. As is the govt. norm, most of the orders from PSU banks and govt.
entities would flow through to BEL for such devices.
The added kicker is its presence in
the Defence sector where too major spending by the govt. would directly benefit
BEL as it is the major supplier for such equipment, as the private sector is
not fully open for such orders yet.
Currently trading at 1375, this again
has a long way to go. It gave a 1:1 bonus issue last year and prior to that it was
trading around 3000. So the magnitude of where it can go can very well be
appreciated.
NBCC (India)
This is one of the few stocks in the
real estate and construction sector which stands out. Being a govt company has
its own advantages.
NBCC has been getting orders across
the board resulting in a strong order book all up till 2021 which very few real
estate and construction companies can claim at the current juncture.
The icing on the cake is the
announcement of a bonus issue to be declared on 04-Jan-17.
Engineers India
This is one stock which has given
excellent returns over the last 1 year, going against the market trend which
has either remained flat or been negative.
But being in the hydrocarbon consultancy
sector, EI‘s business largely depends on the oil sector. With OMCs (HPCL BPCL,
IOC) giving a bullish outlook on their business and planning capex over the
next few quarters due to lower subsidy burden due to market-linked oil prices,
EI is assured of good business from them as it enjoys a healthy relationship
with all of them. Besides, once the oil prices start stabilizing or even moving
up slightly (considering that they had nearly touched the bottom a few months
back, have just recovered some lost ground, but are still trading at half their
prices a year or so back, this is not an impossible situation), its fortunes
would again turn positive.
This is again a bonus candidate.
ICICI Bank
This is one stock which has been
classified as a fallen angel due to its lacklustre performance over the last 2
years. Once considered as the no. 2 bank behind HDFC Bank, it has ceded this
position to the likes of IndusInd Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank, thru poor
management of NPA and hence concern over
the lack of quality of its credit book/loans.
But it must be remembered that it
still has sound management headed by Mrs. Chanda Kochhar who has proven
credentials and sooner or later is bound to get her act together. And the other
major bonus point with this bank is that it has a lot of sound businesses in
its fully-owned subsidiaries – Mutual Fund where it is in the top 3 fund houses
in the country and some of its schemes have been consistently topping the
charts over the last few years, General/non-life Insurance business, Broking
business, Home Finance and a few other minor ones which have ample scope for
value-unlocking over the next few years. Due to the turbulence over the last
few months, its newly listed life insurance business has also not commanded the
kind of premium valuations that it most likely deserves. But with the Max
Life-HDFC Life merger coming thru in the near future, this situation is bound
to get corrected as it will provide a benchmark for the sector as a whole which
was missing all this time.
Currently trading at 255, this surely
has a long way to go even to get back to its earlier levels, and provides an excellent
opportunity for investors to get in at an opportune time. This can well be
called a contra or value buy in the current scenario and the patient ones who
can wait it out for a year or two are likely to reap rich rewards at the end of
that period.
Let’s now pause a bit to see how my
picks did last year:
|
Price as on 31-Dec-15
|
Price as on 30-Dec-16
|
Gain/loss
|
Axis Bank
|
449.50
|
450.00
|
0.11%
|
MCX
|
925.75
|
1266.55
|
36.81%
|
Sterlite Tech
|
96.65
|
96.15
|
-0.52%
|
Jamna Auto Industries
|
139.60
|
168.45
|
20.67%
|
Surya Roshni
|
142.50
|
174.40
|
22.39%
|
Sun TV
|
426.15
|
490.00
|
14.98%
|
DCB Bank
|
81.55
|
107.50
|
31.82%
|
Overall
|
2261.70
|
2753.05
|
21.72%
|
As seen from the above table, except
for Axis Bank and Sterlite Tech, most of the stocks have done well giving a
healthy overall return of close to 22% YoY.
.
I still believe that Axis Bank is
going thru a loss of form but needs just 1 knock to regain its old form, as
they say in cricket. As to when that will come, the jury is still out. Again, I
have faith is Shika Sharma’s management capability and this is a bet on that.
She has steered it well over a long period and only over the last 2 years, it
has floundered along with its close cousin ICICI Bank. But law of averages will
catch up soon and its recovery should start from the overall economy’s
turnaround.
I think enough has already been
written about Sterlite Tech’s potential and let’s wait for it to unfold. So it
figures in this year’s list as well.
All in all, a healthy return of more
than 20%, which is way more than the indices and most of the MFs. So after
a dismal 2015, here is something to celebrate and I hope that the celebrations
continue this year as well. Here’s wishing all investors a very profitable
2017.
Happy investing in 2017!
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