Business Standard

A rainbow among dark clouds

- The author is a stock market writer, tracking corporate earnings and investor psychology to gauge where markets are not headed

The objective of this column is to seek that silver streak in an otherwise grey cumulus (how else can you politely describe 5.6 per cent gross domestic product growth of the first quarter?).

These, m’lord, are some of my humble findings: Virinchi Ltd: An earnings before interest and tax (Ebit) of ~5.75 crore in the June 2016 quarter transforme­d to ~14.35 crore in the June 2017 quarter; this is despite an increase in depreciati­on from ~3.55 crore to ~8.13 crore; a steady interest outflow of ~4.73 crore, now indicates an interest cover in excess of 4.0. The best part of the story: Its flagship hospital enjoys attractive operating leverage, which means as utilisatio­n rises, the bottom line and RoCE (return on capital employed) passthroug­hs could be quicker. Orient Cement: This appears to be building into an interestin­g play. Appraise the numbers of the past four quarters: Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) movement from ~19 crore to ~48 crore to ~79 crore to ~123 crore. Interest outflow has declined from ~36 crore to ~33 crore across the terminal quarters. Even as the delta is widening, there is a case for higher capacity utilisatio­n across the next few quarters on the one hand and the acquisitio­n-led benefits kicking in thereafter. A couple of observatio­ns may be worth the stock picker’s attention: The company has discovered a new animal spirit; the aggregate capacity goal the company had outlined for 2020 has been largely achieved three years ahead of schedule. The one company that set a similar pace was Dalmia Cement and see where it has gone. Dilip Buildcon: I have been wary of infrastruc­ture building companies on the grounds that most work for bankers rather than shareholde­rs. The one company that could make me rethink is Dilip Buildcon for the sheer heftiness of its recent numbers: Revenue increased every single of the past four quarters – from ~916 crore to ~1,664 crore; Ebit has more than doubled from ~105 crore to ~238 crore; depreciati­on has increased from ~54 crore to ~65 crore; interest outflow has increased from ~96 crore to ~111 crore. The deduction: Interest outflow increased ~15 crore in the past four quarters; Ebit strengthen­ed to ~133 crore. Baby, there is something happening here, I keep telling myself. InterGlobe Aviation: The economy might not have done well but you won’t get that inkling from InterGlobe’s numbers. Ebit increased every single quarter of the past four quarters: ~238 crore to ~678 crore to ~697 crore to ~1,201 crore. Interest moved from ~76 crore to ~77 crore in the past three quarters; other income jumped ~30 crore (depreciati­on declined ~20 crore). I am waiting for the September quarter numbers. Phillips Carbon Black: I have written so often on this company’s capacity to consistent­ly surprise that someone could well turn around to say I have a vested interest (which I don’t). So, please track the quarter-wise sequence of this company and salivate at the thought of ‘If I had only bought this stock 18 months ago…’

 ?? MUDAR PATHERYA ??
MUDAR PATHERYA

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