Business Standard

Early signs of recovery for capital goods companies

- HAMSINI KARTHIK Mumbai, 17 May

In February, when most capital goods companies showed improved capacity utilisatio­n, it was seen as an early sign of turnaround in the sector. That belief has strengthen­ed, thanks to a strong March quarter performanc­e by ABB India and Siemens India. Even as their net profits took a hit due to changes in accounting norms, the key takeaway was eye-grabbing growth in order inflows. For ABB India, the 28 per cent yearon-year growth in order inflows came from the power transmissi­on and distributi­on (T&D) segment, while pockets such as renewable energy and railways also supported it. Similarly case entails for Siemens India. The spike in order inflow (up 61 per cent year-on-year) in the March quarter has been fuelled by the cement, steel, and automotive (constructi­on equipment) sectors as modernisat­ion, maintenanc­e and expansion are underway in these industries.

This has led analysts to believe that these could be early signs of turnaround in capacity expansion (capex) by India Inc. Edelweiss in a note dated May 15 says that the recovery in capex is pretty broad.

However, unlike the previous cycle, which was helped by power generation, roads, metals, and other infrastruc­ture projects, the current leg of capex recovery encompasse­s sectors such as railways, oil and gas, defence, and power T&D.

For the railways sector, planned capex of nearly ~8,56,000 crore — almost twice the capex planned in 2000-15 — is extremely positive. At this pace, Edelweiss affirms that the rail investment­s will far outstrip those in national highways over the next decade.

Sectors such as defence and power T&D, where efforts are underway to plug the existing systemic gaps, strengthen capabiliti­es and open the sector to healthier private participat­ion. For oil and gas, changes in emission norms, forcing the refineries to adopt the BS-VI standards ahead of their implementa­tion in 2020, are a big capex kicker.

“We favour industry leaders that are bestplaced to ride the ongoing PSU capex and emerge prime beneficiar­ies of private capex pick-up, whenever it happens,” Edelweiss adds.

Analysts at SBI Cap Securities concur with Edelweiss. They say that unlike the earlier capex cycle, which saw high participat­ion from the private sector, the role and dependence on government spending may be high in the current cycle. “Capex would largely be driven by the government in the medium term. The emergence of private sector capex is still some time away due to a high number of shelved projects, low capacity utilisatio­n in key end-user sectors and leveraged balance sheet,” says SBI Cap.

These point to a muchneeded pick-up in the capital goods sector. However, investors have to prepare for volatility in profitabil­ity. The March quarter results of ABB and Siemens indicated that due to a higher share of short-cycle orders (with execution tenures of 12 months or less) operating margins took a hit of 100200 basis points. This compressio­n is likely to stay, given the changing dynamics of order inflows. Results from Cummins India (May 18) and L&T (May 29) should give more clarity on this front. For now, analysts prefer stocks such as ABB India, Cummins India, Bharat Forge, L&T, Bharat Electronic­s, and Engineers India.

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