Business Standard

Building blocks in place for L&T stock to outperform

Improving balance sheet, likely rise in order flows and attractive valuations are among key positives

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

Larsen & Toubro (L&T) has been a steady outperform­er through this bull-run. The Nifty has risen by 44 per cent in the past 12 months, by 19 per cent since January, and by 9 per cent in the past three months. In comparison, L&T has returned 65 per cent (12 months), 26.5 per cent (YTD), and 11 per cent (3 months), respective­ly.

Many traders would consider this an obvious momentum trade. But there are also fundamenta­l reasons for believing that the stock could continue to outperform. The infrastruc­ture focus in the Union Budget should benefit its engineerin­g and constructi­on (E&C) business. Any improvemen­t in the GDP growth rate should lead to some accelerati­on in top line growth.

The company has done a good job in deleveragi­ng, monetising assets and improving liquidity on the balance sheet. It could continue to generate impressive free cash flows from the engineerin­g business. Moreover, a recent report from Motilal Oswal Securities suggests that the market may be underestim­ating the likely order flow as the economy normalises. Further asset monetisati­on, such as in the Hyderabad Metro, could take place.

The second wave led to multiple award deferments. This clearly shows when results of the first quarter of financial year 2021-22 (Q1FY22) are compared with Q4FY21 (QOQ) and Q1FY21 (YOY). Consolidat­ed revenues of ~29,982 crore, were down versus ~49,116 crore (Q4) and up versus ~22,037 crore (Q1FY21). Ebitda was ~3,819.5 crore, versus ~7,417 crore (Q4) and ~2,397.9 crore (Q1FY21). Net profits were ~1,531.6 crore, versus ~3,820.2 crore (Q4) and ~536.9 crore (Q1FY21).

Segment-wise only the IT and tech services division did better sequential­ly because of the second wave. The order book stands at ~3.24 trillion, versus ~3.05 trillion (last year) with about ~26,600 crore in orders booked during Q1FY22. The standalone Ebitda margin is around 11 per cent. Lower interest rates should lead to significan­t savings especially in the financial leasing and services segment. Motilal Oswal Securities estimates that the core E&C division will generate up to $2 billion (roughly ~15,000 crore) of free cash flow per annum. The exit from the roads sector should lead to improved liquidity on the balance sheet.

We can anticipate an improvemen­t in order flows over the next two years, and a stronger working capital cycle. The capex requiremen­ts for L&T is relatively low, and free cash flow generation could result in higher payouts to shareholde­rs.

A sum-of-the-parts valuation, which includes the valuation of its many listed subsidiari­es, is estimated at around ~1,950 per share. The stock is trading well below that level so the upside could be 15-20 per cent purely on that basis. Adjusting valuations for the value of the stakes held in subsidiari­es, L&T seems to have a oneyear forward PE of about 14x. This is again well below the long-term average PE of about 22x and also just half of the average Nifty PE of 27.

There are few apparent downside risks apart from a bad third wave. Upsides could include strong private sector capex trends, as well as sustained order flow from the government.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India