Business Standard

Tough to justify Havells’ valuation

- HAMSINI KARTHIK Mumbai, 11 May

Havells, the electrical equipment major, might be a classic case of a mid-cap stock being re-rated much ahead of an improvemen­t in its fundamenta­ls. While its stock continued to react positively (up two per cent on Wednesday) to a decent set of March quarter (Q4) results, the 50 per cent year-to-date gain might limit a significan­t upside from here, as Havells now trades at 40 times its estimated FY18 earnings.

And, sustaining the profitabil­ity could be a challenge. Even if recovery after demonetisa­tion gradually plays out, the consolidat­ion of Lloyd’s recently acquired consumer business could dilute the earnings margin.

In fact, even the Q4 performanc­e doesn’t convincing­ly demonstrat­e that the note ban pressures are gone. Schemes introduced by the company during that period to push sales at dealers might be only gradually withdrawn in the coming weeks. Pricing for this, the Street did not have high expectatio­ns, too.

Still, net revenue for the quarter (Q4) at ~1,710 crore (up 17 per cent year-on-year) managed to comfortabl­y exceed the Bloomberg estimate of ~1,643 crore. However, net profit, impacted by certain write-offs, was down 73 per cent over a year, sharply below expectatio­n.

That said, as the March quarter of FY16 was also puffed by a one-off gain of ~204 crore, these items have to be excluded. Profit before tax and oneoff transactio­ns at ~171 crore grew by only four per cent over a year. This is muted compared to revenue growth, as higher selling, general and administra­tive (SG&A) expenses kept a check on operating profit, up four per cent year-on-year to ~230 crore. The latter margin, thus, took a beating from 15.2 per cent a year before to 13.4 per cent in Q4.

As for the segments, beneficial copper prices for most of Q4 helped the cables division to post revenue growth of 12 per cent but the division’s margin declined by 180 basis points (bps). Being a commodity-dependent segment, analysts believe the trend should normalise by the June quarter. The switchgear business, which for long posted single-digit growth, showed promise in Q4 with revenue growth of 12 per cent. However, its operating profit margins have declined steadily over recent quarters, from 40 per cent to 38.5 per cent in Q4.

The consumer durables business continues to offer cushion (revenue up 28 per cent year-on-year), though the intense competitio­n and the company’s inability to pass on increasing raw material costs dragged profit margins for the segment down by nearly 360 bps year-on-year to 24.5 per cent.

A few analysts say Bajaj Electrical­s’ recent revamping of its distributi­on network could have helped entities, including Havells, to gain some market share, apart from the structural shift from unorganise­d to organised players.

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