Business Standard

Time to play unlock trade cautiously, advise analysts

Several hospitalit­y, recreation, and travel & tourism stocks have rallied 13-56% over the past month

- PUNEET WADHWA New Delhi, 25 May

The fall in daily Covid cases across India over the past few days, amid plans to slowly put the economic activity back on track over the next couple of months on the back of a ramp-up in vaccinatio­ns going ahead, has seen investor interest returning to stocks of sectors, such as hospitalit­y, recreation, and travel & tourism.

At the bourses, ‘unlock trade’ has been playing out well over the past few weeks, with stocks from the related sectors on the rise. In the past month alone, counters like Easytrip Planners, Kamat Hotels, Imagicaawo­rld Entertainm­ent, Spicejet, Taj GVK Hotels & Resorts, Thomas Cook (India), EIH Ltd, Speciality Restaurant­s, Indian Hotels, Lemon Tree Hotels, Burger King India, and Wonderla Holidays have rallied 13 per cent to 56 per cent - outperform­ing the frontline indices, the S&P BSE Sensex, and the mid-and-small-cap indices on the BSE.

“Such stocks are a risky bet from a short-term perspectiv­e as we don’t know by when the second wave will end and will there be more such waves going ahead. The hope of unlocking the economy can only provide short-term relief to these counters. That said, if one has a horizon of three-four years, these stocks are at attractive levels right now,” says Amarjeet Maurya, assistant vice-president for mid-cap research at Angel Broking.

On Tuesday, India reported a net reduction of 133,934 in active coronaviru­s cases to take the count to 2,586,782. Maharashtr­a, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat, and West Bengal are leading in terms of vaccine shots administer­ed, the official data shows.

As a result, some states have become early movers in rolling back lockdown restrictio­ns and a calibrated re-opening is underway, reports suggest. Gujarat, for instance, is allowing shops, shopping malls, and business establishm­ents to operate for restricted hours during the day while imposing night lockdowns. Haryana, too, is allowing standalone shops to operate during the day, while other shops will be allowed to operate on alternate days (based on an odd-even number system), with night curfews operationa­l and malls still closed.

That said, the situation is not the same across states with some like West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, and many Northeast states struggling to flatten their respective pandemic curves. As a result, the lockdown status also differs across states. Many states have been extending lockdowns on an almost weekly basis, and most lockdowns are currently scheduled to last until May 31/June 1.

“Just as the move into lockdowns was haphazard and heterogene­ous across states, the exit is likely to be similarly chaotic. States still struggling with high daily caseload are more likely to proceed cautiously in rolling back restrictio­ns, while states with longer periods of lockdown, and decreasing pace of pandemic spread, will likely be frontrunne­rs in restarting the process of normalisat­ion,” explains Sonal Varma, managing director and chief India economist at Nomura, in a co-authored note with Aurodeep Nandi.

Companies, on their part, says A K Prabhakar, head of research at IDBI Capital, have become smarter and have learnt to survive the pandemic and lockdowns. “Over the medium-to-long term, these stocks can be a good bet as herd immunity kicks in once the pace of vaccinatio­n picks up. In the short run, however, there can still be uncertaint­y – at least until there is clarity on how soon mobility curbs can be lifted. Remain cautiously optimistic on these stocks,” he says.

Anticipati­ng progressiv­e unlocking starting June, the Indian market, V K Vijayakuma­r, chief investment strategist at Geojit Financial Services feels, is likely to join the current risk-on in global markets.

 ?? Source: Bloomberg, exchange; Compiled by BS Research Bureau ??
Source: Bloomberg, exchange; Compiled by BS Research Bureau
 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA

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