Business Standard

IT share in Nifty50 at a five-year high

Combined weighting of software companies at 15% now from 12.3% in December

- KRISHNA KANT writes

IT majors such as TCS, Infosys, and Wipro have turned out to be the favourite defensive bets for equity investors worried about the uncertaint­y after the Covid-19 lockdown. The combined weighting of IT firms in the benchmark Nifty50 index is now at a fiveyear high of 15 per cent.

Informatio­n technology (IT) majors such as Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS), Infosys, and Wipro have turned out to be the favourite defensive bets for equity investors worried about the economic uncertaint­y after the Covid-19 lockdown.

The combined weight of IT companies in the benchmark Nifty 50 index is now at a five-year high of 15 per cent as these companies continue to outperform the broader market. In comparison, they accounted for 12.3 per cent of the index at the end of 2019 and 12.8 per cent in December 2018.

The combined market capitalisa­tion of five IT companies, which are part of the index, is up 6.5 per cent since the beginning of 2020 against a 6.6 per cent decline in market capitalisa­tion of the index.

Tech majors had a combined market cap of ~15.9 trillion on Friday, up from ~14.9 trillion at the beginning of January this year. In comparison, the index companies’ total market capitalisa­tion is now down to ~84.6 trillion from ~90.5 trillion at the beginning of the year.

Infosys has been the top performer in the industry with 24 per cent year-todata rise in its market value, followed by HCL Technologi­es with gains of 10 per cent and Wipro rising 6.4 per cent. In comparison, Tech Mahindra has been a laggard with a 21 per cent, while industry leader TCS is up just 2 per cent.

Analysts attribute the outperform­ance to the industry ’s resilience during the pandemic and betterthan-expected earnings reports during the June quarter. “These companies surged on the back of sound operating margin expansion and future growth guidance in the range of 1-2 per cent. Although growth expectatio­ns are still in-line with the past trajector y, the cost reduction trigger has re -rated IT stocks in India,” said Jimeet Modi, founder and chief executive officer, Samco Group.

According to Modi, IT players have brought about renewed confidence among equity investors, who were otherwise ready for a “washout quarter". The NSE IT Index was up 8.1 per cent last week led by Infosys and Wipro, which witnessed strong double-digit rally.

At the macro level, the broader market dependence on IT companies to drive the overall corporate earnings in the current financial year will continue.

Brokerages expected IT companies to account for nearly 27 per cent of the combined net profit for all index companies in the June 2020 quarter, nearly 50 per cent higher than their historical share. Excluding banks and non-bank lenders, the sector is expected to account for 42 per cent of the index earnings in Q1 FY20, against a historical average of 24 per cent.

It could be even higher if manufactur­ers and lenders report lower than expected profits as has been the case in last few quarters.

The Street expects IT companies to maintain their profits at last year’s level against an estimated 33 per cent year-on-year decline in the combined earnings of non-it index companies in the April-june 2020 period.

On the top line front, IT majors are expected to account for 14.6 per cent of the combined net sales of index companies in June quarter against historical average of around 10 per cent.

Most analysts expect the trend to continue given the industry’s ability to report earnings growth despite the pandemic. “IT companies are expected to be least impacted by the lockdown unlike manufactur­ers and industrial companies. This would translate into earnings outperform­ance by the industry and superior stock performanc­e,” said Dhananjay Sinha, head of research at Systematix Group.

Most brokerages have upgraded the sector after the first quarter results. ICICI Securities, for instance, expects 20 per cent upside in Infosys over the next 12 months and has raised the price target to ~1,000 a share. “Despite challenges in the quarter, the company’s execution has improved. We believe this is on the back of large deal win and market share gains,” write Devang Bhatt of ICICI Securities in the companies’ earnings report for Q1FY21.

Similarly, Axis Capital sees 11 per cent upside in Wipro, while Motilal Oswal Securities expects a 23 per cent upside in HCL Technologi­es from its Friday’s closing price of ~623.

TCS has been an outlier and the street expects a subdued performanc­e from the stock going forward. Kotak Institutio­nal Equities has cut the company’s forward earnings estimates for FY23 by about 4 per cent and has reduce rating on the stock assigning a fair value of ~2,040 per share against Friday’s closing price of ~2,201.

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