Business Standard

Stocks of MNCS zoom up to 144% in 2 months

- DEEPAK KORGAONKAR & PUNEET WADHWA

Over the past two months, stocks of multinatio­nal companies (MNCS) have outrun the broader markets by gaining up to 144 per cent. The Nifty MNC index has gained 31.4 per cent from its March low, against 31.1 per cent rise in the Nifty50 index. Even on a year-todate basis, the fall in the Nifty MNC index at 7.7 per cent is less than the Nifty50 index, which slipped 17.9 per cent during this period.

Vodafone Idea, Oracle Financial Services, Sterlite Technologi­es, Vedanta, Britannia Industries, Bata India, Honeywell Automation, Maruti Suzuki India, and United Spirits from the Nifty MNC index have rallied over 30 per cent.

GMM Pfaudler, Bayer Cropscienc­e, and Astrazenec­a Pharma India are some of the nonindex MNC stocks that have rallied between 50 per cent and 85 per cent during this period.

The outperform­ance of MNCS has seen 19 such stocks grab a spot in the top 100 list of companies by market capitalisa­tion, compared to 14 companies as on January 20, 2020, when the benchmark indices hit their all-time high.

Stocks of MNCS have been driven higher by two key factors – liquidity in the markets and delisting hope. There have been expectatio­ns that some MNCS may look to delist from the Indian bourses, which caught investors’ attention.

“Companies with pedigree and sound business model will continue to do well. One needs to evaluate on a case-by-case basis and accordingl­y take an investment call. But broadly, one can stay invested for now,” said G Chokkaling­am, founder and managing director, Equinomics Research & Advisory.

MNC firms are traditiona­lly known for strong parentage, technologi­cal proficienc­y, and assetlight business models. They are

usually well-capitalise­d, have low debt exposure, and good dividend policies.

The Budget 2020 proposed for the abolition of dividend distributi­on tax (DDT), but it still gets taxed in the hands of recipients or unitholder­s. The companies giving out rich dividends to consumers

and with substantia­l foreign shareholdi­ng will stand to benefit from the removal of DDT, said analysts.

“Over the past few years, MNC stocks in the FMCG and pharma categories have risen, as companies have penetrated the Indian markets well. Such stocks will continue to do well. On the other hand, those engaged in constructi­on have languished. In uncertain times, like Covid-19, investors tend to flock towards safety, better disclosure norms, where some MNCS score over home-grown names. Besides, they also dole out healthy dividends,” said A K Prabhakar, head of research, IDBI Capital.

For the financial year ended December 2019, Sanofi India had announced a total dividend of ~349 per share, including a one-time special dividend of ~243 per share, while Nestlé India recommende­d a final dividend for 2019 of ~61 per share. Both companies follow the January-december financial cycle.

For 2019-20, SKF India, too, declared a special dividend of ~130 per share, while Bosch recommende­d a dividend of ~105 per share. Honeywell Automation India and Maruti Suzuki India declared a final dividend ~75 and ~60 per share, respective­ly. All these stocks are yet to turn ex-dates for their respective dividend.

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