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Veteran warns against India stock market as just growth play

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MUMBAI: Sustained 7%-plus economic growth may sound like a great recipe for stock-market returns, but investors looking at a country like India still need to do their homework.

A quick look at the automobile industry shows why. While India’s vehicle production has climbed about 25-fold over the past quarter century, the two major players in the market as of the mid-1990s – Hindustan Motors Ltd and Premier Ltd – barely register today.

It’s a cautionary tale that a rising economic tide doesn’t necessaril­y lift all boats, highlighte­d by market veteran Prateek Agrawal.

“Growth doesn’t mean that every stock you touch turns to gold – only a small section of companies have managed to actually participat­e in the India story,” Agrawal, chief investment officer at ASK Investment Managers Pvt Lte in Mumbai, said in an interview last week. “We always scan for firms that have grown consistent­ly.”

While India’s market value has nearly doubled over the past five years, to US$2.3 trillion, there aren’t many companies with significan­tly sized earnings.

Fewer than 10% of the more than 5,000 companies had annual net earnings of at least 1 billion rupees (US$15mil) on average in that period, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Lacking much of an export base – a status likely to remain for some time to come – and with banking-sector troubles restrainin­g private-sector capital spending, India’s consumptio­n story is the most convincing to Agrawal, who’s been analysing or investing in markets for almost a quarter century.

As much as about 75% to 80% of the 133 billion rupees that Agrawal oversees in five main portfolios are companies tied to consumptio­n – such as automakers, financiers of home and tractor purchases, retail-sales products and white-goods makers.

Each portfolio has holdings of about 20 stocks; the combined universe is not more than 75. — Bloomberg

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