Business Standard

Stock upgrades may add steam to rally

Analysts have raised price targets for key index components by over 10% in recent months; Sensex, Nifty could see another 7-10% rise in the medium term

- PAVAN BURUGULA

Although the benchmark Sensex and Nifty indices have rallied 15 per cent since the beginning of 2017, there could be more room for further upside, going by analysts’ projection­s. In the past one month, index heavyweigh­ts such as HDFC Bank, HDFC, Reliance Industries and Hindustan Unilever have seen their consensus 12-month price targets being upped between 10 and 15 per cent. Interestin­gly, the increase in price target was despite some of these stocks climbing to record highs.

An analysis of consensus price targets for Sensex components indicates an upside of up to 10 per cent in the medium-term for the index. The Sensex on Monday closed at 30,571, having gained 15 per cent since the start of the year and 21 per cent in the past one year.

The sharp gains notwithsta­nding, analysts see further upside in all Sensex components, barring just six. According to data compiled from Bloomberg, one-year target prices of all the Sensex companies, barring informatio­n technology (IT) and pharma sectors, have been upgraded in the past one month. Experts said improving macroecono­mic indicators, along with a revival in corporate earnings, were the key reason behind the sharp rise in the target prices. Global economic outlook too is supportive, they added.

According to Ridham Desai, managing director, Morgan Stanley India, although the current rally has not been logically driven by an improvemen­t in fundamenta­ls, this rise in Indian stocks was not completely irrational, given the positive outlook. “The growth cycle is turning. This could be the beginning of a new growth cycle. Earnings could compound at 20 per cent over the coming five years. Rising demand for equities from domestic households and potential M&A (merger and acquisitio­n) activity would also push the markets in the coming months,” Desai said.

Not just individual stocks, but most brokerages have started to upgrade the year-end targets for the benchmark indices. Morgan Stanley recently increased its bull-case target for the Sensex to 39,000 from 33,000 earlier.

Incidental­ly, during the start of the year, most brokerages had set modest year-end targets, which have already been achieved.

The current rally has taken many analysts by surprise as they were expecting a relatively muted performanc­e in the first half of 2017 due to the possible impact of demonetisa­tion on corporate earnings and global factors such as aggressive protection­ist policies. However, the markets emerged out of the red zone quicker than expected because of impressive flows from institutio­nal investors — both foreign and domestic.

Foreign institutio­ns have pumped in more than $7 billion (nearly ~45,000 crore) so far this year, while domestic mutual funds, too, have bought shares worth ~22,700 crore, stock exchanges’ data showed.

Analysts expect divergence in stock performanc­e among companies with retail- and consumptio­n-related stocks doing well, while technology and pharma could be an overhang on the index. There are seven companies representi­ng these sectors in the Sensex and most of them have seen a downward revision in the target price in the past one month. Analysts see an average downside of around five per cent in these stocks.

“There is going to be a sector-wise divergence not just in the stock performanc­e but also in terms of earnings. India is an essentiall­y retail and consumptio­n story and companies from these sectors are expected to do well. On the other hand, the changing global scenario could impact the performanc­e of IT and pharma companies,” said Sunil Shah, head of research, Axis Securities.

Another key factor to consider would be the global commodity prices. The uptick in global oil and metal prices has helped large commodity focused companies register a superior performanc­e. An unexpected slump in commodity prices due to global factors could hurt the earnings potential of these companies, experts warn. Companies such as Reliance Industries, ONGC, Coal India and Tata Steel would feel the impact of any such fall.

 ??  ?? Analysts expect several index heavyweigh­ts to gain further, which could fuel further upside
Analysts expect several index heavyweigh­ts to gain further, which could fuel further upside
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