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The upside and the downside

October 01, 2004 16:10 IST

After gaining ground in the last month or so, the stock markets seem to be taking a breather as of now. Amidst promising fundamentals, we believe that investors need to take a very balanced view between the upside and the downside at the current juncture.

Lets start with the few of the upsides first.

  1. With GDP expected to grow by around 6% in FY05 and at a higher rate beyond this fiscal year, there is every possibility that growth at the topline level for corporates will remain strong. Based on our study, over the last five years, the compounded growth in the topline of the Sensex companies was at 15%. If one were to take a broader universe of around 187 companies under the Quantum Universe, the topline growth for the same period was at 11% levels. We believe that if the Indian economy is expected to grow by around 13% to 14% on a nominal basis (i.e. real GDP growth plus inflation), there is visibility in corporate sales growth. This is a positive for the stock market.

    Real GDP growth comparison - One leg up!
    (% growth)200220032004E2005E
    World3.0%3.9%4.6%4.4%
    Developed nations----
    USA2.2%3.1%4.6%3.9%
    UK1.7%2.3%3.5%2.5%
    Japan-0.3%2.7%3.4%1.9%
    Emerging markets----
    India4.7%7.4%6.8%6.0%
    China8.0%9.1%8.5%8.0%
    Thailand5.4%6.7%7.0%6.7%
    South Korea7.0%3.1%5.5%5.3%
    (Source: CMIE Monthly Review - Sep'04)


  2. There have been a number of policy decisions in the last five years, which were aimed at attracting more capital into the country (hike in FDI limits and increased scope for private-public sector partnerships in infrastructure projects and so on). With the government showing keenness in improving the basic infrastructure facilities in the country, there exist a strong trigger for consumption led growth. Infrastructure spending has a positive impact on general income levels in the country (directly and indirectly).

    Just to put things in perspective, while overall bank credit has grown YoY at around 24% (Source: RBI Weekly Statistics), non-food credit has witnessed a robust growth of 25% YoY, which to an extent, indicates that credit demand is gaining pace.

  3. The services and the manufacturing segments of the Indian economy continue to gain in strength. Due to the their cost competitiveness on a global scale, the potential for India to emerging as a outsourcing destination remains bright. While it is very difficult to quantify as to what extent will the benefit be, the case is stronger than ever before.

Now consider the key downsides...

  1. Oil prices have risen very sharply over the last one and a half years. At some stage, this is likely to slowdown economic growth when one considers the fact that the country is import dependent to the extent of 70% of its domestic requirements. Inflation has inched higher. While interest rates in key global economies are northbound, we believe that there exists a possibility of interest rate rising in India as well. This could impact valuations of stocks.

  2. While in 2003, strong growth prospects was supported with cheap valuations, it is not the case now. Further rise in stock prices from the current levels is likely to be led by corporate performance. While prospects remain promising, we believe that in some sectors like auto, banks, commodities and pharmaceuticals, some stocks have run ahead of their fundamentals. The CAGR in net profit of Sensex over the last five years at 16% has outpaced the topline. Though there is scope for cost cutting, competitive pressure is likely to exercise a downward pressure in margins from hereon. The Sensex is already currently trading at a price to earnings multiple of 15 times trailing twelve months earnings.

Having said that, we also believe that the returns from equities, as an asset class, over the next three years, is likely to be higher than say, debt market instruments. In this context, within one's risk-return profile, equities have a solid case.

Which sectors to invest in? We would exercise caution when it comes to high capital-intensive sectors like automobiles and commodities because margins are close to the peak and competition is intensifying.

We would suggest investors to consider investments in infrastructure based sectors and if one believes that consumption is likely to increase, there is a case for FMCG as well.

There is value in key software and pharmaceuticals stocks as well from a three-year perspective. Happy investing!

Equitymaster.com is one of India's premier finance portals. The web site offers a user-friendly portfolio tracker, a weekly buy/sell recommendation service and research reports on India's top companies.



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