Here’s wishing everyone a great Diwali and a prosperous
new year ahead. As compared to last year, though the market did see
new highs, the much needed correction also happened some time back.
Fortunately, the fall was not as huge as that witnessed in earlier instances.
Of course, in the volatile world that we live in, with geo-political tensions
(India-China, N. Korea etc.) keeping the market on its toes, this trend is
likely to continue. So rather than tracking the market highs and lows, the
returns would be much higher if one were to focus on stock picks which either
have not participated in the market rally or have come down due to extraneous
factors, not of their doing.
There were 2 major nation-shaking events since last Diwali – the much
talked about Demonetization and in recent times, the GST. While the benefits of
both these moves will be evident only much later, they have at least laid the
foundation for some sound economics. While the govt. did go ahead with both
these things without adequate preparation, as was experienced and proved in
their aftermath, both these things did show the govt’s resolve to go ahead with
bold actions irrespective of the short-term consequences. This is a much
refreshing change after the policy paralysis experienced over the last decade
before the current govt.
As I have been mentioning over the last 3 Diwali blogs, it never pays to get
carried away in the stock market, in either direction, especially in India. So
any serious dip in quality stocks with proven managements should be considered
as an opportunity to buy into those shares at lower prices, thus increasing the
chances of reaping better gains, than would otherwise have been obtained.
As they say in sports, Form is temporary but Class is permanent. Though
there may be near-term blips in the impacted companies’ performance, it is
unlikely to last beyond a couple of quarters and then the real benefits of
things like GST will kick-in. And I can bet that the upside will be far greater
than the current downside, as these things have a far-reaching impact which
will surely be seen over the coming years.
In the last 1 year, though the mid and small caps have rallied hugely, and
are quoting at valuations higher than what would be warranted, it is not
something to really worry about. The Indian market has now formed a new normal.
And the primary reason for this is the constant inflow of SIP money that most
retail investors have started pouring into equity MFs form their bank savings
accounts. If fund managers are regularly getting 5000 cr. of steady money into
equities, and there is nothing to indicate that this is going to stop anytime
soon, what else can they do? It is by design and not choice that the Indian
markets will continue their steady upmove with reasonable valuations being
re-defined. Companies like Page Ind., Jubilant Food etc. always enjoyed higher
than average market valuations even among the same category of stocks and
continue to do so. The only difference is that the other mid and small caps
will also catch up with them under the new definition of what is a reasonable
valuation.
So given that this is a buyer’s market now, where should u place your bets?
The focus this year will be on pedigreed companies with proven managements and
great businesses, ones which are far more likely to withstand the market
volatility than some of the others. Also, I have attempted to identify stocks
which may be beneficiaries of corporate moves and improvement in their
prospects. Needless to say, management quality, business domain and growth
prospects should always be primary factors while deciding on buying any stock. Some of the stocks have indeed run up, but as
I have said above, are quoting at fair valuations, under the new definition of
fair.
South Indian
Bank (SIB)
This is a
south-based bank which has recently declared bad results with a fall of 96% in
YOY net profit. However these were due to a one-off provision. In spite of
this, the operational performance improved significantly with double digit
growth in business and OP. Slippages were
normalised to 2.2% levels versus 4.5% in the past 8 quarters. They have continued
to build more granular portfolio with focus on SME/retail along with CASA
improvement (up 20% YoY to 24.6%). Their focus on cross-sell (benefits of
centralised processing, tie ups with Kotak Life and SBI Life) supported core
operating profit which surged >50% YoY.
This is one of
the cheapest banks currently (the other being Karnataka Bank) with a P/ABV of
1.6. The other major factor in favour of this is the prospect of consolidation
among the old private sector smaller banks going forward. In the last few years, banks like Lord
Krishna Bank, Bank of Madura etc have been acquired by the bigger private sector
banks like HDFC and ICICI. With increasing competition, and govt’s push to
consolidate PSBs, this trend should accelerate. And the prime candidates will
be banks like these with strong growth parameters.
This bank is
going the way of Federal Bank. In Diwali Dhamaka 2015, I had written about the
dismal performance of Federal Bank over the last few quarters and how it was
hammered down to 55 due to a bad quarter, in spite of a credible management
looking to get its house in order. You can read it here.
Today it is quoting close to a whopping 125, and looking good for more.
Currently
quoting around 32 levels, SIB has every chance of going the same way. It can
easily give a conservative 25% return till next Diwali.
Balmer Lawrie
Investments (BLI)
Holding companies
have given bumper returns this year (2017) because of the steep discounts to
the investments in their execution companies they were quoting at. Some of them
are from good corporate houses and in many cases the companies which they are
holding are on a high growth path and doing well. These discounts have either
shrunk or the investee companies have done exceedingly well. For e.g. Bombay
Burmah Trading Corp (BBTC) , holding company of Bombay Dyeing and Brittania, has
gone up nearly 3 times in the last 1 year while Vindhya Tele the Birla group
holding company with stakes in cement giant Birla Corp and Universal Cables,
has nearly doubled.
BLI is a govt. company
and is a holding company of Balmer Lawrie Co. (BLC), with nearly 62% holding in
it. Balmer Lawrie Co. is a transnational
diversified conglomerate with presence in both manufacturing and service
sectors. It is a market leader in Steel
Barrels, Industrial Greases & Specialty Lubricants, Corporate Travel and Logistics
Services. It also has significant presence in most other businesses, it
operates, viz, Leather Chemicals, Logistics Infrastructure etc. In its 150
years of existence.
With the govt. on
a divestment spree, it won’t be long before BLI makes it to its list. It is
quoting at nearly 48% discount to its value in BLC. BLI has given a commitment to RBI that it
will divest its holding in BLC and dissolve the holding company. This may
happen sooner rather than later. Interestingly, BLI is one of the few companies
which has not joined this rally of holding companies since the beginning of
this year and its time is yet to come.
Currently quoting
at about 400, this can surely go up by 20-25% once the divestment is announced.
Aditya Birla Capital
(ABC)
This is the child
of the much-awaited restructuring of the Adiitya Birla group companies, listed
and unlisted. It involved the merger of Aditya Birla Nuvo (ABN), which over the
years transformed from a rayon
manufacturer (it was the erstwhile Indian Rayon) to a holding company with
stakes in Telecom, and Financial Services (including Insurance) of the AB
group.
Under the
restructuring, ABN was merged into Grasim Industries, the manufacturing arm of
the group (Viscose fibre and Cement), and then the financial services arm was
carved out as AB Capital.
This high
pedigreed company is into all types of financial services and in the top few of
most of the leading types. For e.g. its AMC division (AB Sun Life AMC, a JV
with Sun Life of Canada), is one of top 5 AMC in the country and boasts of some
of the top performing schemes currently running. Also, the AMC has been in
existence for over 2 decades now (its flagship balanced fund is still called
Aditya Birla Sun Life ’95 fund, since it was started in 1995) and thus has
proven its credentials in no uncertain manner. Besides it CIO, Mahesh Patil, is
one of the most respected fund managers currently in the industry.
AB Sun Life
Insurance, again a JV with Sun Life of Canada, is in the top 5 insurance
companies in India currently.
ABC has also
recently forayed into health insurance and also runs an NBFC (Aditya Birla
Money), though its operations currently are limited. Housing Finance is another
area which is currently not explored.
Besides all the above retail focussed financial services, it is also
into corporate finance in areas like PE, ARC etc. With all these businesses
doing well and opportunities to get into unexplored areas, there is enough
evidence to believe that ABC will have a long term sustainable above industry
growth rate.
Another potential
that ABC possesses to reward its shareholders is thru value unlocking in its
many unlisted businesses. Insurance is on top of this list with its peer groups
ICICI and HDFC already off the block in getting their insurance operations
listed. AMC (MF) is another business which can potentially be listed (Reliance
is already off the mark in this respect).
A truly
buy-and-forget stock, all things considered.
Automotive Axles
(AA)
This is a Kalyani
group company which is a JV with Meritor inc. of USA. AS the name suggests,
this is a market leader in Axles for commercial, off-road as well as defence
vehicles. It supplies axles and brakes to most of the auto manufacturers in
India. The company is a zero debt company and is performing exceedingly well.
Auto-ancillary companies have had a fantastic run in the last few years and are
valued at about 30 times earnings while this is still trading at sub-30 levels
in spite of higher growth. With the CV cycle expected to pick up in the second
half of the year, this will be one of the biggest beneficiaries. The other
trigger for this is the defence orders. Its parent Meritor has an all-terrain
suspension solution technology for the defence vehicles. They may consider
bringing it here in the near future, triggered by the Make In India defence
program.
So all in all, a
sound management, high-tech products and ample opportunities make this a great
pick to have. Kalyani Steels and Bharat Forge, from the same stable, have done
wonders in the last 2 years and look set for more. This can go the same way, if
one is patient.
Piramal
Enterprises (PE)
After AB Capital,
this is another company with a high pedigree in the form of its head Ajay Piramal, an acknowledged astute businessman
in the Indian industry with an uncanny knack to get into the right businesses
and even more importantly, to exit from them at the right price.
In 2010, PE completed the sale of its domestic
formulations business an unprecedented value of ~9x sales and ~30x EBITDA. In
May 2013, it acquired 10% equity stake in Shriram Transport Finance. Later in
April 2014, they acquired 20% equity stake in Shriram Capital Limited, a
financial services company and in June 2014, 9.9% stake in Shriram City Union
Finance Limited, the retail focused Non-banking Financial Company (NBFC) of the
Shriram Group. And in recent times, a deal between IDFC group is in the works
PE is the flagship
company of Piramal Group and has a leading position in the business
verticals it is present in i.e. Healthcare, Financial Services and Information
Management.
Recently they have
entered into another lucrative business of Housing Finance. They have recently
announced a QIP and Rights issue for garnering about 7K crore. With these
funds, they should grow their book to about 1 lakh crore. The other major
advantage of this move would be to bring complementary businesses together.
They are already into Construction and Realty in the form of Piramal Realty. The funding of this business thru HF is
certainly a great fit.
They are also in a
niche business of Information Management. Decision Resources Group, a
subsidiary of Piramal Enterprises Ltd., is a cohesive portfolio of companies
that offers best-in-class, high-value information and insights on important
sectors of the healthcare industry. Clients rely on this analysis and data to
make informed, knowledgeable decisions.
With all these
things in place, this is again a stock which has only created value for its
shareholders consistently over the years. They have a track record of approx.
23% revenue CAGR since the late 80s, which very few Indian companies can match.
The impending
rights issue is something which one should look forward to. Not only can one
buy more shares, probably at a cheaper rate, but also a certain portion is
assured for shareholders. Mind you, the ratio of the rights shares offered to existing
shareholders is not likely to be generous, but one can certainly apply for more
than the allotted quota and expect to gain some more than the eligible number.
The other major trigger that is on the horizon over the year is the
impending re-structuring that Ajay Piramal has advocated. This is quite likely
to be value-accretive, the way most demergers and restructurings in recent
times have been (Aditya Birla Nuvo, Reliance Capital etc.)
Before concluding, let’s quickly look at the performance of last year’s
recommendations:
Stock
|
Last Diwali
|
Current
|
Difference
|
%
|
Jain Irrigation DVR
|
61.45
|
62.10
|
0.65
|
1.06%
|
L&T Finance
|
106.80
|
205.65
|
98.85
|
92.56%
|
Kokuyo Camlin
|
96.30
|
97.60
|
1.30
|
1.35%
|
Aksh Optifibre
|
27.25
|
25.25
|
-2.00
|
-7.34%
|
Aditya Birla Fashion & Retail
|
160.30
|
148.95
|
-11.35
|
-7.08%
|
Overall
|
452.10
|
539.55
|
87.45
|
19.34%
|
All prices in Rs.
So since last Diwali, this portfolio has given a return of 19.34% nearly 16%
more than the Sensex return of 16.7% since then. It is not a stupendous
performance by any yardstick, but certainly a decent one, given the
circumstances. But it must also be borne in mind that L&T Finance itself
has carried the returns on its shoulders single-handedly, while the others
hardly performed. This is not a good sign. However, I believe that this set of
stocks, including L&T Finance, certainly has the potential to perform well
going forward and should certainly be retained and even averaged by adding more
at the current levels as their growth prospects remain strong.
Rome was not built in a day, so also wealth is not created in a year. A
multi-bagger stock is called one, only after it has returned many-fold over a
few years (Honeywell, Manappuram Finance etc. are some examples). Else, it
might just remain a 1-year wonder. And there are enough stocks in this 1-year
wonder category. Just to prove how long
term investing pays, just look at the picks I had written about in Diwali
Dhamaka 2015, in the table below:
Diwali '15
|
This Diwali
|
Diff.
|
Gains/Loss
|
|
Federal Bank
|
55.00
|
125.85
|
70.85
|
128.82%
|
ICICI Bank
|
265.00
|
301.29
|
36.29
|
13.69%
|
Eros
|
275.00
|
221.65
|
-53.35
|
-19.40%
|
Motherson Sumi
|
189.00
|
533.10
|
344.10
|
182.06%
|
L&T
|
906.00
|
1722.98
|
816.98
|
90.17%
|
Ashok Leyland
|
88.90
|
128.20
|
39.30
|
44.21%
|
Overall
|
1778.90
|
3033.07
|
1254.17
|
70.50%
|
All prices in Rs. & adjusted for Bonus as declared during
the period
(L&T, Motherson S & ICICI Bank have
declared bonus during this period)
This portfolio has returned a whopping 70.5% in the
2 year period or a CAGR of about 30% in this period. I am sure that if you sit down with a calculator,
you will get similar figures for the picks in the year prior as well, as all of
them are excellent stocks worthy of holding for the long term.
The current set of mid-cap stocks will hopefully
return even better figure next year.
HAPPY INVESTING
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