Business Standard

THE SMART INVESTOR

Britannia’s sturdy first quarter raises bar for peers

- SHREEPAD S AUTE

While the food category is in a sweet spot amidst the coronaviru­s-led disruption, Britannia Industries' June quarter (Q1) results beat the already high Street expectatio­ns on Friday.

The maker of Good Day brand, in fact, delivered results that were ahead of expectatio­ns on all fronts and raised the bar for peers like Nestle.

Besides brand loyalty, Britannia's strategy to push high-margin products at a time when product availabili­ty was more crucial in the current Covid-19-led environmen­t as many small/unorganise­d players are struggling, coupled with increased focus on rural markets, which are less affected by the pandemic, were the key drivers of its Q1 performanc­e.

The management, during the earnings call, alluded that it emphasised on 20 per cent of its product portfolio, which gets 80 per cent of its revenue.

It helped boost Britannia’s net sales, which grew by 26.4 per cent year-on-year (YOY) to ~3,384.5 crore in Q1, led by 21.5 per cent volume growth. According to Bloomberg, analysts had pegged net sales at ~3,265 crore. The firm, after its March quarter results, had highlighte­d that sales grew by around 24 per cent during April and May. Therefore, the 26.4 per cent sales growth in Q1 indicates further accelerati­on in sales in June.

The beat was sharper at the bottom-line level. Its profit before tax and exceptiona­l items, which was up 81 per cent YOY to ~737 crore, was 36 per cent higher than consensus estimate of ~543 crore. This was mainly for a 634 basis point expansion in Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on, and amortisati­on) margin to 21 per cent, the highesteve­r for Britannia.

Besides higher off-take of high-margin products, benign input costs and cost control fuelled Britannia's operating margin. Its employee cost and other expenses (mainly advertisin­g spend) as a percentage of net operating income fell by 46 basis points and 464 basis points, respective­ly, YOY.

Shirish Pardeshi, analyst at Centrum Broking, says: "Though such high growth rates may be difficult to sustain, Britannia would continue to report good numbers given the double-digit growth of biscuits category and further market share gains by the company. So, there is strong re-rating potential for the stock."

However, on Friday, in an overall bullish market (the Sensex was up 1.5 per cent), Britannia’s stock was down 1.8 per cent after the result announceme­nt. This can be attributed to profit-booking after a 77 per cent recovery from March lows. Moreover, the stock’s one-year forward valuation of 54 times is also 21 per cent higher than its fiveyear mean. Thus, correction­s could be good entry point for long-term investors.

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