Business Standard

‘OUR SENSEX TARGET FOR MARCH 2018 IS 32,200’

Tata Consultanc­y Services and Infosys began the earnings season for the informatio­n technology sector last week. ABHINAV KHANNA, head of equities at Citi India, tells Puneet Wadhwa that he expects earnings for their coverage universe to fall 12 per cent y

- ABHINAV KHANNA Head-equities, Citi India

Your market outlook for the rest of 2017?

Our Sensex target for March 2018 is 32,200, implying that we are expecting a limited upside from here. There are two key risks, a longer-than-expected disruption from goods and services tax (GST) implementa­tion and a full-year earnings downgrade, on the back of a potentiall­y weak first quarter. On the positive side, a good monsoon and the low base effect of demonetisa­tion (will play out in the second half of calendar year 2017) for some sectors like consumer goods will help.

Are you concerned about valuations at this stage?

The Nifty 50 index is trading at around 19 times the FY18 earnings expectatio­n, while MSCI India is around 18 times. Certainly not cheap, especially when we expect higher chances of earnings downgrades than upgrades. Mid-caps and small-caps across some sectors are more expensive than their large-cap counterpar­ts, with the added risk of lesser liquidity and lower earnings visibility.

Your expectatio­ns from the first (June) quarter numbers?

We expect earnings for our coverage universe to fall 12 per cent year-on-year in the quarter. This is driven by: a) positive base effect in financials and materials wearing off (b) GST-related nearterm disruption (c) sector-specific weakness in informatio­n technology (IT) and health care, among others. On GST, I feel it is too early to comment on the earnings impact for FY18 and FY19.

Does the ‘India story’ still hold good for foreign investors?

India remains an attractive long-term investment destinatio­n, and foreign investors remain significan­tly overweight (on India). Political stability, solid growth, a stable currency, the fiscal situation and external account being under control, and inflation in check are some reasons. Their key concerns include relatively expensive valuations, risk of earnings downgrades after a potentiall­y weak first quarter, possible disappoint­ment on rate cut expectatio­ns and a further delay in investment cycle pick-up.

Which sectors and stocks are you overweight and underweigh­t on?

We are overweight on financials, automobile­s and health care (due to hospitals/diagnostic­s instead of pharma); underweigh­t on IT services and consumer staples.

Your strategy for consumer staples and IT services?

On consumer staples, we are primarily negative due to the very rich valuations. On IT services, there have been disruptive trends at a global level in the past few years and we are fundamenta­lly concerned on both the growth and margin outlook. There is risk of further earnings downgrades in IT.

Are the measures adopted to address the non-performing asset (NPA) issue (at banks) enough?

We remain overweight on the financial sector and feel the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the government are largely following the right path on NPA recognitio­n and resolution. We continue to prefer private sector banks over government­owned ones. Housing finance could remain a long-term structural theme, especially on the back on the government’s thrust on affordable housing.

Do you expect more concrete steps to resolve the high debt problem with India Inc?

Any incrementa­l step towards reform is welcome, even if a bit late. Having said that, on corporate debt, the reality is there is a large concentrat­ion within a select few names only — India Inc as a whole is in a more healthy shape than a few years earlier.

By when do you see a recovery in the capex cycle?

This might happen only gradually. Initially, the thrust will be more from the government’s side. So, public sector capex is likely to precede private corporate capex.

Should one stay away from manufactur­ing-related sectors?

From a strategy perspectiv­e, we have an underweigh­t view on metals, though there are some individual stocks that we have a ‘Buy’ on (both in the steel and non-ferrous spaces) from a bottomup perspectiv­e. On capital goods, we are largely ‘neutral’.

NIFTY50 IS TRADING AT 19 TIMES THE FY18 ESTIMATED EARNINGS, WHILE MSCI INDIA IS AROUND 18 TIMES, CERTAINLY NOT CHEAP, ESPECIALLY WHEN WE EXPECT HIGHER CHANCES OF EARNINGS DOWNGRADES THAN UPGRADES

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