Business Standard

It’s all about fundamenta­ls MARKET INSIGHT

Will these catch up with market returns this Samvat?

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

A recent report by CRISIL Research points out that the sales of new homes in the top 10 urban areas has fallen by eight per cent per year for the past six years. That works out to around a 40 per cent drop in sales over this period.

Other estimates say there is between six and seven years’ worth of unsold real estate inventory — 75 months or more — in key areas such as the National Capital Region (NCR) and the Mumbai Metropolit­an Region (MMR). Knight Frank estimates that NCR housing sales during the first half of 2017 (calendar) dropped 26 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) despite real estate prices having dipped by 20 per cent y-o-y. During JanuaryJun­e 2017, 17,188 units were sold in NCR and Knight Frank estimates 180,000 unsold units exist in the NCR.

There are some positive long-term factors. Mortgages have gotten cheaper as interest rates have fallen. Legislatio­n such Real Estate (Regulation and Developmen­t) Act (RERA) and goods and services tax (GST) and the thrust on “affordable housing” should make the market more transparen­t but it’s going to take time.

Developers are desperatel­y hoping that the festive season will boost sentiment. Real estate is, of course, the biggest of big-ticket purchases in the household consumptio­n basket. India Inc is also hoping for a boost in consumptio­n-driven industries such as higher vehicle sales, more clothes, in FMCGs, jewellery, etc as the festive season eases into the wedding season.

The third quarter (Oct-Dec 2017) will be terribly important for an economy that’s seen lower growth now for six quarters. We don't have Q2 (July-Sep 2017) Gross Domestic Product (GDP) data, or many corporate results yet. But some data points suggest the slowdown continued in Q2.

The GST is now into the second quarter of implementa­tion and so industry and consumers have had some time to adjust to new compliance norms. Demonetisa­tion is also almost a year behind us, so there has been cash replenishm­ent and transient effects should have eased off. There could be a favourable base effect in Q3, given that growth tapered off in December 2016 due to demonetisa­tion.

One of the critical factors will be rural sentiment. That is always dependent on the performanc­e of the agricultur­al sector. The monsoon has been reasonable though scattered, with the usual scenario of floods in some areas and deficit rain in others. Early estimates suggest lower kharif production. However, last year was horrible — demonetisa­tion triggered deflation across the agricultur­e sector. So even a moderate agro-performanc­e may lead to better rural sentiment.

If favourable base effects, better rural conditions, etc, don’t trigger a significan­t rebound, the market will be disappoint­ed. Many retailers, jewellers, etc, tend to do around one-third of their sales or even more during the festivecum-wedding season. High-speed data from September suggests some kind of rebound may be on the cards. Vehicle sales were up along with consumer electronic­s. Gold sales are up. But much of this is equated monthly instalment-driven.

Durga Puja or Dussehra as North Indians call it, falling in September makes it harder to judge the extent of recovery since that would have boosted consumptio­n. October 2017 may be a comparativ­ely slower month since both Durga Puja and Diwali fell in October 2016. Ideally data from September-October 2017 should be clubbed together and compared to data from September-October 2016 to adjust for festive season effects. That’s how the Chinese handle their lunar New Year which can straddle two months. However, India always uses y-o-y and that could mean a market response to seasonal distortion­s.

If consumptio­n did bottom out between JanuarySep­tember 2017, and the transient effects of demonetisa­tion are indeed easing off, we should see a bump. That would translate into better numbers across vehicles, FMCG, gems and jewellery. The latter industry will undoubtedl­y be helped by the limit on non-PAN transactio­ns being raised to ~2 lakh since that opened a route for black money conversion.

Interestin­gly, these sectors may also gain in sequential terms due to the GST since June-July-August saw widespread consumer caution as the new norms came into play. So we could see a post-Diwali bump in the numbers. That might translate into a market focus on these areas.

The last Samvat saw a disconnect between fundamenta­ls and market returns. Let’s hope the fundamenta­ls catch up. Happy investing!

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