Big cos gain market share, but small businesses in distress
MUMBAI: The distress faced by small and unorganized companies during the second Covid wave and gains in market share of the bigger firms who remained largely unscathed would reflect in their June quarter earnings.
The smaller firms suffered under the weight of localized and uneven lockdowns and shorter business hours in the fiscal first quarter, affecting operations as well as consumer demand. The quarterly earnings season began on July 8 with Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.
Analysts said smaller businesses lost market share to bigger rivals despite FY21 being a turnaround year in corporate earnings for India Inc., marked by margin expansion and high deleveraging of balance sheets.
“Continuity of Covid restrictions will mean the differences will continue to play out in the June quarter between organized and unorganized players,” said Deepak Jasani, head, retail research, HDFC Securities.
He said that once the lockdowns are relaxed entirely, some of the unorganized players will adapt and return to business, but several others would have been forced to down shutters.
Among sectors, retail, jewellery, real estate, apparel, building products, footwear, electrical equipment, plastics/rubber products, food products, security services, dairy, hospitals and diagnostics, beverages, tobacco, leather, wood and wood products, paper and paper products, chemicals, metal fabrication and education have a high presence of unorganized firms and the pandemic has quickened the pace of shifting market share from them to the organized firms, Jasani said.
Analysts at Edelweiss Securities said divergence in growth rates between organized and unorganized firms can be attributed to factors such as tightening of lending norms for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMES) by banks, lack of raw material availability and labour shortages. Larger players, by design, are better placed to cope with a supply shock than the smaller firms, the brokerage firm said. Meanwhile, the June quarter is expected to witness pressure on margin expansion as raw material costs have risen sharply. Prices of basic raw materials such as crude oil and metals jumped during the quarter. Brent crude prices rose 18%, while aluminium, copper, zinc and lead gained 5-16%.
According to JM Financial, organized firms are best placed to pass on price increases to offset higher raw material costs. “Even in a period of high input price inflation in the past, revenue growth trajectory has not been materially impacted, barring one or two quarters and organized players, in fact, gain market share in a period of high input cost inflation,” it said.