Business Standard

Cipla: Declining India sales lead to a Q1 miss

Margin improvemen­t a silver lining, if sustained, can boost confidence

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

Cipla in the June quarter bore the brunt of de-stocking because of the goods and services tax (GST). Its domestic sales, the largest contributo­r to revenue at 40 per cent, declined 13 per cent year-onyear (y-o-y) and, as a result, revenue and profitabil­ity fell short of the consensus estimate. Net profit may have beaten expectatio­ns but it was largely due to higher other income. Revenue, at ~3,525 crore, fell 3 per cent y-o-y, and missed the Bloomberg estimate of ~3,886 crore.

There are some silver linings, however. For one, looking at the lumpiness in the past, the improvemen­t in operating performanc­e is worth highlighti­ng. Although declining domestic sales had a bearing on earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on, and amortisati­on (Ebitda) and this metric at ~646 crore missed the estimates of ~671 crore, they still grew 6 per cent y-oy. Thus, the margins at 18.3 per cent improved 130 basis points y-o-y and 390 bps sequential­ly, which is positive. Cipla said profitabil­ity was driven by significan­t gross margin improvemen­t and controlled spends. The higher other income of ~151 crore (up almost sixfold y-o-y) helped net profit grow 21 per cent y-oy to ~409 crore, beating the estimates of ~352 crore. The margin improvemen­t saw the stock gain over a per cent after the results but closed 1.1 per cent lower at ~542.70 due to the broad-based selling in markets.

Another positive is that Cipla’s domestic sales, which have been weighed down by GST-led destocking, are expected to bounce back in coming quarters. Beyond India, other geographie­s such as South Africa remain important for Cipla. South Africa, contributi­ng 14 per cent to overall revenue, grew 21 per cent y-o-y and the business has maintained leadership position in key therapies.

In the US, looking at the pricing pressure and rupee appreciati­on, Cipla did fairly well. North American sales (slightly less than a fifth of revenue) fell by two per cent y-o-y, helped by the launch of four products. Cipla also filed three new abbreviate­d new drug applicatio­ns (ANDAs) in the June quarter and is on track to file 25 ANDAs in FY18. The increasing approval rate for new generic launches in the US by industry players, which has led to pricing pressure for establishe­d companies as Sun Pharma, Lupin and Dr Reddy’s, however, will not have much impact on Cipla. The company has increased its focus on the US much later than its peers, and hence a higher number of approvals will help drive its US revenue. Cipla has 96 products pending approvals, and its management also said it was on target to ramp up their launch trajectory in the US.

All eyes, however, also remain on its respirator­y portfolio. The company’s efforts in Europe are expected to bring benefits earlier, than the expected gains in the US. The combinatio­n inhalers’ market size in the UK alone stands at $450 million. Any fresh approvals and launches can lead to a further re-rating of the stock, which has outperform­ed many of its larger peers in the past one year.

 ?? Source: Company ??
Source: Company

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