Business Standard

MARKET MIND

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The search for that one stock that transforms a virtual beggar like me into a profligate millionair­e might be over.

The company is Alphageo India Ltd, engaged for more than a quarter of a century in providing inland integrated seismic services for downstream oil exploratio­n companies.

When oil majors need to discover oil, they need a trusted consultant to tell them where to drill. Alphageo is that trusted consultant; it analyses subterrane­an realities, generates data, interprets findings and goes back with geoseismic evidence to drive informed decision-making. Result: Alphageo enhances the capital efficiency of some of India’s largest oil companies.

For the past couple of decades, Alphageo was that service-driven nugget whose prospects you always discussed with the suffix “hopefully some day in the future”. Because, even as India needed more oil, the urgency seldom translated into a concerted national oil-seeking agenda.

Which is really the irony: India consumed more oil that only made some other country richer; India’s largest seismic survey company comprised a mere four crews (not enough to even get it past the global heats in school sports language). Then the deluge. The new Indian prime minister set a goal of reducing India’s dependence on imports for 77 per cent of its ‘energy’ requiremen­ts – down 10 per cent by 2022 and by 50 per cent by 2030.

I would have dismissed this as another grand-sounding hollowism, but for the fact that the Directorat­e General of Hydrocarbo­ns embarked on an exercise to obtain fresh data of unsurveyed national pockets (estimated at around 50 per cent of India’s identified sedimentar­y basins) through a 2D-seismic survey.

This strategic clarity resulted in India announcing possibly the largest oil-finding programme in the world.

The big news, then, is that the ever-small Alphageo carved out the disproport­ionately large share of seismic orders. The company’s revenues in the five years

MUDAR PATHERYA

leading to 2015-16 have been: ~46 crore, ~24 crore, ~96 crore, ~73 crore and ~90 crore. Contrast this with the fact that the company’s order book is now ~1,700 crore — and all of this to be liquidated by June 2019.

For a company whose big moment would have been getting to ~100 crore of annual revenues, the reality is that it can potentiall­y report a top line six times that number starting this year; for a company needing to nurse four crews (and overheads) through the slowdown, the priority is to get to 18 in the next few months; for a company that would always apologetic­ally say “we are the largest in India” without anyone caring a damn, Alphageo is possibly the largest seismic survey company in the world.

And, all of this on an equity capital of less than ~6 crore, virtually no debt and a projected Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) margin of 35 per cent (my assumption).

Just the kind of company that will need to send a tranquilis­er to shareholde­rs with its next annual report.…

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