Business Standard

Rich valuations may weigh on Voltas’ cool outlook

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Despite stellar Q3, analysts turn cautious after 36% gain in three months

Shares of India’s largest air conditioni­ng company, Voltas, corrected more than 4 per cent from its intraday high on Tuesday. They closed 2.1 per cent lower as investors booked profits, even as the company reported betterthan-expected results for the October-december (third quarter, or Q3) quarter.

Voltas’ earnings in the seasonally lean Q3 beat analyst expectatio­ns by a huge margin, thanks to all-round growth across business segments. Revenue from the unitary cooling products (UCP) business rose 40 per cent over the correspond­ing quarter, aided by pent-up demand and increased stocking by dealers, ahead of price increases initiated in January.

The company maintained its leadership position in room air conditione­rs, with a market share of 26 per cent as of December 2020 and saw the share of inverter ACS grow 60 per cent, from 49 per cent in the year-ago period.

Additional­ly, the pick-up in execution in the electromec­hanical projects business boosted revenue from that segment in Q3. This resulted in a 50 per cent jump in the company’s operating profit, while margins expanded nearly 80 basis points yearon-year (YOY) to 7.3 per cent in Q3.

Overall, net sales were up 34 per cent YOY at ~1,995 crore versus consensus estimate of ~1,655 crore, while net profit surged 46 per cent YOY to ~129 crore, against expectatio­ns of ~100 crore.

Analysts said this sets a solid foundation for strong growth in the coming quarters.

“A favourable upcoming summer season, market share gains, benign base, and strong execution should continue to drive Voltas ahead of industry growth,” said Naval Seth, research analyst at Emkay Global.

Also, the company’s order book at ~7,270 crore at the end of Q3 continues to remain robust, providing strong revenue visibility, he added.

The Street also remains enthused with the long-term potential from the scaling up of its home appliance manufactur­ing joint venture, Voltbek Home Appliances, with the management hopeful of cornering 10 per cent market share by 2025.

Factoring in the strong beat in Q3 and positive business outlook, most brokerages have increased their earnings and upped the target price estimates for the stock. However, an over 36 per cent rally in the company’s share price over the past three months has turned valuations expensive. Not surprising then, the stock saw some profit-booking, despite Q3 results beating estimates.

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