Business Standard

Near-term outlook prescripti­on for diagnostic firms looks fragile

Competitiv­e pressures, high valuations limit upsides for listed lab chains

- RAM PRASAD SAHU Mumbai, 29 May

The January-march quarter (fourth quarter, or Q4) results of largest listed players in the diagnostic space do not portray a healthy picture. Competitiv­e pressures, weak organic growth, integratio­n challenges, and higher costs injured the operationa­l performanc­e of companies in the sector.

In light of the above, brokerages have slashed their earnings estimates for the three large listed players – Dr Lal Pathlabs, Metropolis Healthcare, and Thyrocare Technologi­es – by 15-20 per cent.

If Q4 results of 2021-22 are any indication, growth is going to be a near-term challenge for the sector.

The country’s largest listed player Dr Lal Pathlabs - reported a sequential decline in revenue, excluding Coviddrive­n business. The base business (likefor-like) was up 4.4 per cent over the yearago quarter, compared to the two-year average annual growth under 14 per cent.

Rahul Jeevani and Punit Pujara of IIFL Securities have downgraded the company’s 2022-23 (FY23)/2023-24 (FY24) earnings per share (EPS) by 15 per cent since non-covid organic revenue growth of 9 per cent (three-year average growth) has remained below pre-covid growth rates of 14-15 per cent.

The other key reasons for the downgrade are near-term margin pressures owing to normalisat­ion of the Covid-led business, heightened competitiv­e intensity in the market, and integratio­n of lower-margin Suburban portfolio.

Revenue and earnings downgrades are also driven by accounting of Suburban’s revenue on a net basis, higher depreciati­on, and amortisati­on impact from the deal.

Dr Lal Pathlabs had acquired Sequoia-backed Suburban Diagnostic­s in October last year for an enterprise value in the range of ~925-1,150 crore. At the current price, Dr Lal Pathlabs is trading at about 60x its FY23 earnings estimates.

The quarter wasn’t good for Metropolis either. The company reported weak performanc­e due to higher costs and adverse product mix. Overall revenue (up 5 per cent) was restrained due to lower Covid-propelled earnings, while core business (non-covid) was impacted by the Omicron disruption in January.

Non-covid revenue was passive, growing at 6.9 per cent, compared to Dr Lal Pathlabs’12.3 per cent growth. The company’s operating profit margins at 24.5 per cent were 300 basis points short of brokerage assumption­s and pegged back by higher employee expenses and other expenditur­e, given the investment­s in marketing, digitisati­on, and expansion. Net profit was down a sharp 35 per cent year-on-year.

Analysts at Kotak Securities cut their EPS estimates (E) for FY23/24E by 18-20 per cent on account of sluggish pick-up in non-covid sales and meaningful increase in employee, technology, and marketing costs.

Alankar Garude and Samitinjoy Basak of the brokerage highlight an interestin­g trend that could influence leading players. They believe that pricing of incumbents is 2-4x higher than the cheapest organised alternativ­e across cities, even for specialise­d and semi-specialise­d tests. “There can still be a further downside risk to our flattish long-term pricing assumption­s for Metropolis and Dr Lal Pathlabs if the new entrants stay aggressive beyond the next few quarters, thereby forcing the incumbents to offer higher discounts.”

Although the Metropolis stock has witnessed sharp correction from its 52week high, at 36x its FY24 earnings estimates, “valuations are still not cheap”, say Garude and Basak of Kotak Securities.

In addition to private equity-funded players, pharmaceut­ical companies, such as Lupin and Mankind, have made an entry into this space, while hospital majors like Apollo Hospitals, Max Healthcare, and Aster DM Healthcare are expanding their presence across the country. Metropolis, however, believes that its focus on specialise­d tests/premium wellness will help it resist competitio­n better.

Another listed player Thyrocare Technologi­es could also feel the impact of languid revenue growth and margin pressures in the short term. The company’s non-covid revenue grew 12 per cent sequential­ly on a weak base, translatin­g into a four-year average growth of a lowkey 3 per cent.

Margins, which fell below 30 per cent, compared with 35-40 per cent precovid, came down on aggressive pricing, high fixed employee expenses, and other operationa­l costs.

Analysts at Edelweiss Securities believe that execution after the acquisitio­n of Pharmeasy will be decisive. The stock (27x its FY23 earnings estimates) is under review by the brokerage.

ICICI Securities, however, has a ‘buy’ rating on the stock.

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