Business Standard

‘Consensus earnings estimates high and need to be toned

- NEELKANTH MISHRA,

managing director - equity research, at the Indian arm of financial services multinatio­nal Credit Suisse, believes the earnings estimates for FY17 and FY18 should see increased downgrades. Edited excerpts of a talk with

What is your outlook on the markets for 2017?

India has underperfo­rmed over the past two months by 10-11 per cent in dollar terms. Within Asia, we are the only ones to see a fall in foreign flows. The MSCI India price to earnings ratio (PE) is actually trading at a discount of one to two per cent to the MSCI, versus the usual 10-12 per cent premium. Rather than calling Nifty levels 12 months forward, I would advise investors to be in a few sectors and stay away from the others. A weaker real estate market, a stressed banking system, uncertaint­y around GST (goods and services tax) implementa­tion, and disruption due to shift from unorganise­d to organised sector means expectatio­ns have to be brought down. Earnings growth estimates are too high and need to be toned down.

I don’t expect PE multiples of the market as a whole to expand. The consensus earnings growth number for FY17 and FY18 is very high.

What are your Budget expectatio­ns ?

All we know is that it might be an incredibly complex one, due to a host of factors. They are working with very shaky Gross Domestic Product projection­s. Though the tax numbers have gone up, no one knows if these are sustainabl­e. Second, planned and unplanned expenditur­e categories are merging and that has to percolate through to a number of department­s and their spending behaviour.

Then, they are merging the Railway Budget, a huge expenditur­e item and very complex. There is GST, where we don’t even know the rates or implementa­tion time line. Finally, if the government accepts the recommenda­tions on FRBM (Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budget Management), they will have very little time to incorporat­e these in the Budget document.

My own sense is there might not be too much of adventuris­m in the Budget. Corporate tax rates will come down to 29 per cent this year.

How prepared is India Inc for GST?

Very badly prepared. There is a view in the government and among corporate groups that you can’t be prepared for such changes. Instead of focusing on growth, companies will have to focus on implementa­tion of GST, training of their staff and the entire transition process. This will lead to slowing investment demand.

Which sectors do you find value in?

We prefer non-India focused companies over India. There are still too many structural­ly negative trends in health care. The informatio­n technology (IT) sector has de-rated the most in the past five years. Global cyclical recovery means their fundamenta­ls should stop deteriorat­ing. There is a fear around visa issues and taxation issues in the US, key overhangs. We cut our exposure in cement, discretion­aries, NBFCs (non-bank financial companies) and allocated those funds to IT, where we are marginally overweight.

We prefer housing finance companies, as they will be the biggest beneficiar­ies of lower interest rates, which can push up their volumes. We will buy private bank stocks when they correct. We are underweigh­t on staples.

Over five years, NBFCs, consumer discretion­ary and cement sectors have witnessed strong but unjustifie­d expansion in their one-year forward PE, compared to their earnings growth. We think these sectors will disappoint investors fundamenta­lly over the next 12 months. One justificat­ion for the high multiples for the longer term in these sectors was lower global bond yields. With bond yields in the US rising, a perpetuall­y high PE multiple will be questioned. Many of these stocks will also go through a time correction.

You believe the government does not want public sector banks (PSBs) to grow. Could you elaborate?

The government's assumption while allocating capital to PSBs seems to be that they will not grow faster than the banking system. There has been a very slow progress on appointmen­t of leaders. It suggests they don’t want these banks to fail but are also not encouragin­g their growth. A lot of privatisat­ion has happened through the private players gaining share in a growing market. I think the banking system is heading that way. It is very hard to privatise them (PSBs), due to strikes, political pressure and similar issues.

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