Business Standard

Mid- and small-cap IT firms command premium at bourses

- KRISHNA KANT

The rally in mid- and small-cap stocks has spilled over into the IT sector as well. Second and third-tier IT stocks, which historical­ly traded at a discount to the big five IT companies, are now trading at nearly 25 per cent premium to their large-cap peers.

The smaller IT companies have a price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of nearly 38 times against the big five’s current P/E multiple of around 31x.

This is a contrast to last year, when midand small-cap IT companies traded at a P/E multiple of 13.3x at the end of March 2020, while large-caps had a multiple of 18.9x.

This premium is largely down to a sharp rise in the stock price and market capitalisa­tion of mid-cap IT companies such as L&T Infotech, Mindtree, Mphasis, L&T Technology, Persistent Systems, Coforge, and Tata Elxsi, among others. (See the adjoining chart)

Analysts attribute this to investors’ expectatio­n of faster earnings growth in smaller firms. “Most investors expect mid- and small-cap IT firms to report faster earnings and revenue growth over the next 2-3 years compared to their large-cap peers,” says Shailendra Kumar, chief investment officer, Narnolia Securities.

According to him, smaller firms reported better margin expansion in financial year 202021 (FY21) on the back of superior cost control compared to their large-cap peers.

The rally in mid- and small-caps has also been driven by growing participat­ion of retail investors. “Record numbers of retail investors have entered the equity market and they largely invest in mid- and small-cap names,” says G Chokkaling­am, founder and managing director, Equinomics Research & Advisory Services.

Chokkaling­am also attributed the rally to the potential acquisitio­n of the mid- and smallcap IT firms. “Many smaller IT companies are potential acquisitio­n targets, which is driving their valuations,” he adds.

The combined market capitalisa­tion of midand small-cap IT companies is up nearly 4x since March 2020, against 84 per cent rise in the market cap of large-cap IT companies.

These smaller firms had a combined market cap of ~4.34 trillion on Wednesday, as against ~1.14 trillion at the end of March 2020, and ~2.85 trillion at the end of December 2020.

In comparison, the large-cap companies’ market capitalisa­tion grew from ~13.8 trillion at the end of March 2020 to ~25.4 trillion on Wednesday. The large-caps have moved in tandem with the BSE Sensex since the beginning of 2021, as against a big outperform­ance by their smaller peers. The analysis is based on the quarter-end and latest market capitalisa­tion and earnings of the 26 IT companies that are part of the BSE500 index.

The 26 IT companies had combined market capitalisa­tion of around ~30 trillion as on Wednesday. The top five companies that are part of the benchmark indices, which are large-caps, are Tata Consultanc­y Services, Infosys, Wipro, HCL Technologi­es, and Tech Mahindra. The rest belong to the mid- and small-cap space.

The big five account for around 85 per cent of the industry’s combined market capitalisa­tion and nearly 90 per cent of revenues.

Analysts are, however, cautious about the prospects of mid- and small-cap IT stocks. “The valuation premium of mid- and small-cap IT over large-cap is now beyond the comfort range, and I am underweigh­t on smaller names,” says Kumar.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India