Share Market, NSE, BSE, MCX, Indian Stock Market, Share Tips
Posted on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 - 11:28 amShort URL:
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The Nifty and the Sensex continues its gains for the second trading session of 2013.
The Nifty closed at 5,993 after briefly touching 6,006 intra-day, up 43 points.
The Sensex closed at 19,714, up 133 points.
“‘Nifty has hit 6,000 levels after a gap of two years. We witnessed one of the best years for FII inflows in 2012 with total inflows crossing $24 billion. Markets bounced back sharply with a more than 27% gain. The political leadership ushered new reforms when the country was facing the threat of a sovereign downgrade. We expect this rally to continue in 2013 on the back of rate cuts, revival in growth and fiscal consolidation. We expect 13-15 per cent earnings growth and a P/E rerating from 14 to 16x,” said Varun Goel, head PMS-Karvy.
The volatility index, India Vix, closed flat at 13.71.
Bajaj Auto, J P Associates, Maruti, BPCL and IDFC were the top five Nifty gainers while Asian Paints, Bharti Airtel, ITC, M&M and Wipro were the top losers.
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Large Cap Ideas:
Bajaj Auto (Present price: 2131): High focus on exports, new launches going forward, diversified product profile should help Bajaj Auto perform relatively well in the domestic 2-w (2-wheeler) segment, where Honda Motors is growing at the cost of ‘India-focused’ players. The company’s focus on doubling exports by FY’16E (currently contributing 35 per cent to net sales), leadership status in certain key segments in geographies like Egypt, new model launches in the near-term should help the company navigate through the present slowdown in the automobile segment.
Financial Technologies (Present price: Rs.1129): It’s a classic play on the robust growth of the exchanges in the country. The company’s 26 per cent stake in MCX should also reap rich returns for the investors considering the superior technology platform, robust initial response in the form of new members.
HDFC Bank (Present price:Rs.679 ): HDFC Bank could very well be regarded as the best managed bank in the country. The premium valuations very well justifies the consistency which it has been reporting over for quite some years now. The Bank has grown its net profit consistently at a CAGR of +30% over the last several years. More commendable is the fact that this growth has been achieved along with consistent improvement in asset quality. The Bank’s loan book is equally divided between the retail and the corporate segments. In the corporate segment, HDFC Bank finances mostly working capital loans in case of corporates. The Bank has a strong liability franchisee with CASA ratio quoting at 45.9 per cent of the total deposits. A high CASA ratio leading to effectively lower cost of funds has helped the Bank clock the highest NIMs (next only to Kotak Bank) in the banking space. We feel that the best for HDFC Bank is yet to come.
Lupin (Present price: Rs.613): As mentioned in the outlook for the market above, we expect significant buoyancy in the markets during the initial part of the calendar year. Post this, the market is expected to take cues from the economic growth parameters. To safeguard the portfolio in case of significant declines, if any, during the later part of the year, we have chosen Lupin from the pharma sector. In H1FY’13, the company posted a net profit of Rs.570 crore (an increase of 20 per cent) on net sales of Rs.4458.4 crore (an increase of 35.7 per cent y-o-y). The company has seen a few launches in the US market over the last couple of months and we expect them to start contributing from Q3FY’13 onwards. We expect an improvement in overall margins on the back of pick-up in the US business and stable growth from India and rest of the world.
Apollo Tyres (Present price: Rs.89): We believe Apollo Tyres is the only Indian company capable of emerging as a global-tyre manufacturer (presently exports to about 115 countries across the globe). The prices of key input in the tyre industry - natural rubber - has corrected between 16-18 per cent over the last one year. This, should lead to an improvement in operating profit margins considering the fact that raw material prices (of which, natural rubber is a major component) stood at 63 per cent of net sales in FY’12. We agree to the fact that there is weakness in the overall automobile OEM sales but as far as the replacement market is concerned, the same is expected to compensate for the same to a large extent.
Midcap Ideas:
Delta Corp (Present price: Rs.73): After touching a high of more than Rs.130 in November 2010, the share price of Delta Corp has retraced back significantly. Over the last 12 months, the share has consolidated in the range of Rs.55 and Rs.87. We believe that the share price would take cues from the numbers which the company is going to report going forward. Considering the four major developments taking place in terms of setting up a hotel and a floatel (floating hotel) in Goa, gaming facility at Daman and a new vessel at Goa(Horseshoe), we expect an exponential growth in the earnings from FY’14E onwards. In short, Delta Corp is a company where the numbers can only keep on improving every passing year because of ‘consumption’ play.
Hi-Tech Gears (Present price: Rs.85): Hi-Tech Gears Limited manufactures automotive gears and shafts at Bhiwadi, Rajasthan, mainly for 2- wheelers like Hero Honda, Escorts, among others. The company has an in-house forging unit and derives close to 20 per cent of its revenues from exports. The company has set up another plant near its mother plant for manufacturing of transmission auto components for CVs and passenger vehicles. The company posted an EPS of Rs.22.4 in FY’12 compared to Rs.18.7 during the previous year. The company has a policy of distributing more than 20 per cent of the earnings in the form of dividends. The results for H1FY’13 were weak on the back of the present fortune of the industry. We believe that the suppressed valuations of the share price have factored all the negatives associated with the sector as well as the company.
IFB Industries (Present price: Rs.103): A consumer durables company available at attractive valuations. The company is the leader in the top-door washing machine segment and being the first entrant in the dish-washers segment should augur well for the company, going forward. IFB Industries has a clean Balance Sheet with net cash and cash equivalent totaling up to Rs.88.1 crore, equivalent to more than 20 per cent of the present market-cap of the company. With the rupee showing signs of stability, consumer durable companies like IFB Industries, being net importers, should be benefitted. This, coupled with reduction in interest rates by 100-150 bps should augur well for the sector as a whole, IFB Industries included.
India Cements (Present price: Rs.91): We expect the buoyancy in cement segment to continue in this calendar year also. With major cement stocks outperforming the broader indices, the upside potential in large cap stocks appears limited. Despite the fact that India Cements is not in the best shape and does not have the best of profitability and RoE, we believe that the present share price underperformance captures all these negatives. Management’s efforts to ramp up the captive power generation (from the present 50MW to 100MW) making the company self-reliant in power, coupled with efforts to ramp up mining should reduce the overall cost structure for the company. The company’s improved operating performance on the back of these measures should result in significant growth in profitability going forward. At the present price, the stock has a decent dividend-yield of ~3 per cent.
IndusInd Bank (Present price: Rs.416): Under the able leadership of Mr. Romesh Sobti and his team, the Bank has grown its net profit 10- fold over the last four years from Rs.80 crore in FY’08 to Rs.810 crore in FY’12. This growth has come despite two bad years for the global economy. The asset quality of the Bank continues to be robust. With high focus on the consumer lending sector on the asset side and improvement in liability franchisee (scaling up the CASA from the present ~28 per cent to 34 per cent over the next two years, already moved from ~14 per cent in FY’08) should help improve the profitability of the Bank.
Jammu & Kashmir Bank (Present price: Rs.1295): One of the best managed quasi-PSU banks, Jammu & Kashmir Bank is a play on the economy of the state of Jammu & Kashmir. The Bank has posted strong growth in Net Interest income and expect the PAT to grow in a similar fashion. This growth has come when the asset quality is robust with gross NPAs at 0.2 per cent and Provision Coverage Ratio(PCR) at more than 90 per cent. The Bank is dominant in the state with one out of every two individuals having an account with the Bank. As far as the loan book goes, the Bank derives significantly high margins (in excess of 5 per cent in the state of J&K) and stable margins outside the state. During H1FY’13, Jammu & Kashmir Bank posted Net Interest Income of Rs.1089 crore compared to Rs.871 crore, an increase of 25 per cent y-o-y. The Bank registered a pre-provisioning profit of Rs.837.8 crore compared to Rs.629.1 crore, an increase of 33.2 per cent y-o-y. Profit after tax for H1FY’13 stood at Rs.515.6 crore. EPS for the half-year stood at Rs.106.4. Considering the improving prospects, consistent growth in earnings, we expect a strong re-rating to terms of valuation. 12.
Karnataka Bank (Present price: Rs.167): With major corporate houses geared up to set up Banks/convert existing NBFCs into Banks, we expect value unlocking in a number of banks, mainly old private sector banks in the country. These banks have a long legacy and do not have a single identifiable promoter group. Karnataka Bank clearly stands out in the lot with a book value of Rs.137.9 and EPS of Rs.13.1 in FY’12. The Bank, with a decent asset quality, is available at attractive valuations. During H1FY’13, the Bank reported an Interest Income of Rs.1838.3 crore, an increase of 27.3 per cent y-o-y. PAT for H1FY’13 stood at Rs.200.6 crore, an increase of 120.8 per cent y-o-y.
MRF (Present price: Rs.12807): MRF Limited is the only company (with a consistent track record) in the history of Indian stock markets which has never announced a bonus/stock-split. Considering the small equity (Rs.4.2 crore compared to reserves of Rs.2556.6 crore), decent management and leadership status in the domestic market (~25 per cent market share), we expect MRF Limited to perform well going forward on the back of an expected pick-up in the OEM segment (on the back of interest rate cuts) and fall in natural rubber prices.
NIIT Technologies (Present price: Rs.242): NIIT Technologies has a strong order book and the company’s valuations are compelling at the present levels considering a turnover of Rs.2000 crore and a PAT of Rs.228 crore, translating into an EPS of Rs.37.9 in FY’13. During H1FY’13, the company has clocked a turnover of Rs.969.7 crore and a PAT of Rs.100 crore. The net cash and cash equivalent in the company’s books as on September 30, 2012 stood at Rs.35+ per share per share (~15% of the present price). The stock has a decent dividend yield of approximately ~3.5%. NIIT Technologies has had an excellent dividend payment track record. The dividend ratio for FY’12 stood at 80 per cent and payout ratio stood in excess of 25 per cent over the last five years. We expect this payout policy to continue in future also. Inspite of the velocity in the decision-making process slowing down, we expect NIIT Technologies to post growth every quarter not only on a y-o-y basis but also on a q-o-q basis. The Travel and Tourism segment, which now accounts for more than 40 per cent of the revenues, should help the company mitigate the impact of slowdown in the BFSI segment.
Sun Pharma Advanced Research (SPARC) (Present price: Rs.135) It’s a high-conviction stock idea considering the fact that hopefully the company’s core focus on research should start paying off with the company filing wrap matrix formulation of Levetiracetamcin in the US in Q1FY’13. This, in our opinion, should be a turning point as far as the financial performance of SPARC is concerned. The company has a strong pipeline of around 19 products, which can start yielding benefits going forward. Though the visibility is low, looking at the promoters and the strong pipeline, we have a strong conviction that the stock should yield excellent returns over a slightly longer time-frame.
Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.
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Rupee: India’s current account deficit widened to a record high of 5.4 per cent of GDP in the September quarter as export growth slowed more sharply than imports, and with a similar gap expected in the December quarter, the weakness in the rupee is likely to be prolonged. A sharp rise in gold imports, a hefty oil bill and falling exports due to the global slowdown have kept India’s current account deficit at persistently high levels. The rupee was the third worst performer in Asia in 2012, even though net inflows into Indian stocks were the highest in the region.
Fiscal Cliff, RBI & Union Budget:
With the fiscal cliff deal in place, we feel that global factors will take a back-seat for sometime now as India starts looking forward to the loosening of the monetary policy (RBI) later this month and the Union Budget (from arguably the stock market’s most popular FM) in February. And, while many may argue that populist measures will dictate the last Budget of the UPA government (before the nation goes to polls in 2014), we beg to differ. While, like every year, the Budget will have its huge dollops of populist measures, we do feel that the finance minister will perform a good balancing act and announce measures to kickstart the economy, while continuing to work on reining in the fiscal deficit. And, our view is that if the present government harbours any hope of returning to power in 2014, it will have to be very lucky as far as the state of the economy is concerned. If by election time, the Indian economy is clearly back on the recovery path, it will be the single-largest trump card for the government. Therefore, in all probability, we don’t expect the economy (and the stock markets) to be ignored by the finance minister.
The Liquidity Factor:
While India saw huge inflows from FIIs in 2012, which contributed largely to the stock indices yielding a 26 per cent return, one needs to accept that India attracted huge flows mainly at the cost of China. Therefore, if China shows any semblance of recovery in the current year, it could divert some inflows away from us.
Interest rates will dome down, finally:
Some of the pre-conditions for a rate-cut lower rate of price increases and a decline in fiscal deficit are emerging. However, the magnitude of decline in interest rates will depend on crude oil and other commodity prices remaining stable, or falling. Also, it needs to be taken into account that lower funding (interest) costs could translate into higher imports, weakening the currency. This remains a worry.
Europe crisis far from over:
Even as financial markets are calmer and the chances of the euro disintegrating have diminished, it has come at the cost of highly indebted eurozone states committing themselves to spending and tax increases. This could ultimately lead to the 17-nation eurozone contracting further in 2013 as deficit-cutting measures bite deeper. Rising unemployment and falling tax receipts would make it harder for governments in countries such as Italy, Spain, Greece and even France to meet their budgeted targets. That could unsettle financial markets again, particularly in countries where political instability is adding to the uncertainty.
Conclusion:
We do believe that the Indian markets will start on a firm footing and possibly make a new high in 2013. However, global equity markets are unlikely to do well as macro factors look terrible and one could see a sharp growth slowdown as we move into the year. And, while India will show great outperformance in 2013, it can’t remain immune to a bad global situation and therefore, will suffer some hiccups going ahead.
Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.
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2012 has been an excellent year for our equity markets. Our markets have gone up 27% so far and have been the top performer globally, out-performing most global indices. However, most of the domestic investors seemed to have missed out on this rally as they have continued to repose their faith in the hitherto performing alternative assets of debt, real estate, and gold.
The sharp losses incurred in equities twice in 2008 and in 2011 has dented investor confidence in equities as an asset class. The question that arises now is will India give another handsome performance next year to provide an opportunity for the domestic investor to participate in. In this note, as we take stock of the events that have transpired, what it portends for the future, the likely investor response to global and domestic economic policy developments….
….we see that a confluence of a number of positive factors (high global liquidity, global tail risks receding, global investors chasing high emerging market yields, India’s relative attractiveness among emerging markets, the government getting its act together on economy policy reforms, corporate earnings stabilizing, likely interest rate cuts & reasonable market valuations) are setting up our markets for another cracking run in 2013. To take advantage of the likely rally in our equity markets in 2013, we recommend a list of stocks, which we expect to give an average return of 20%-40% with a one year time frame.
Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.
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Jan 2 2013, 15:14
Budget 2013: Flat GDP cuts FII eye on Re; fiscal discipline key, says Chinoy
- in MARKET OUTLOOK
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Maruti Suzuki is India’s largest PV manufacturer with ~40% market share. Falling crude prices and a reversal in the interest rate cycle in H2FY13E will help improve the sales over FY14E/FY15E. We believe newer launches and an improving interest rate cycle will revive volume growth for MSIL. Another important trigger for the stock has been the continued depreciation of the Yen since the regime change in Japan. MSIL has a large currency exposure of ~28% of net sales. Hence, the decline in Yen has a strong earnings impact for MSIL. Any further depreciation of the yen will further aid MSIL's profitability. We have a BUY rating on the stock.
Public holding more than 90% in Indian cos
Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.
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Last year, the PCG Desk had come out with a list of ‘20 BEST BETS FOR 2012.’ The list comprised of 10 LARGE CAPS & 10 SMALL CAPS.
With 2012 behind us, we deemed it fit to assess our performance. In a separate column, we have highlighted the highest price the scrip touched in 2012. However, for percentage returns, we have taken the closing price of December 31, 2012 vis-à-vis the closing price of December 31, 2011 and calculated the annual returns.
In conclusion, if one had invested Rs. one lakh in each scrip, the Rs.20 lakh investment would have been worth Rs.27.3 lakhs, an appreciation of 37 percent, against the Nifty return of 27 per cent during 2012.
Also Read - Year 2013: Motilal Oswal`s largecap and midcap picks
Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.
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Jan 2 2013, 15:14
Budget 2013: Flat GDP cuts FII eye on Re; fiscal discipline key, says Chinoy
- in MARKET OUTLOOK
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EUR/USD can even give a dip upto 1.3230 but can be bought on dips for the day. It has an intraday support at 1.3175 & resistance is at 1.3330. Expected intraday range is 1.3230-1.3330.
GBP/USD can give a dip upto 1.6290 but can be bought on dips for intraday trading. It has an intraday support at 1.6240 and resistance at 1.6400. Expected intraday range is 1.6290 - 1.6400.
USD/JPY can even give a dip upto 86.90 but can be bought on dips for intraday trading. It has a good intraday support at 86.50 & resistance is at 87.70. Expected intraday range is 86.90-87.70.
Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.
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