Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Margin pressure keeps India Inc on the edge

- Ujjval Jauhari ujjval.j@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Surging inflation is becoming a headache for companies and consumers alike. Rising input costs are putting a significan­t drag on companies’ earnings, though some have managed to pass the costs to consumers.

A Mint analysis of 435 manufactur­ing companies that have reported their March quarter earnings showed that input costs have risen by around 24% from a year earlier, and a sizable number of them have managed to pass the elevated costs to consumers, reporting higher revenues. Some companies are charging consumers more by reducing the weight of packaged goods.

“The impact of inflation is visible. The number of companies beating estimates in the March quarter earnings season from the Nifty 200 index is higher than those who missed them,” said Deepak Jasani, head of retail research at HDFC Securities. “However, a large part of this growth is likely to have been driven by price hikes taken on the back of inflationa­ry pressure.”

Sales growth has been good, but profit has grown at a slower pace due to higher raw material costs and interest expenses, he added.

As input costs surged, companies have either raised prices or reduced the weight of packets to save costs. April retail inflation surged to an eightyear high of 7.79%, even as the reading has remained above the central bank’s 6% upper tolerance limit for the fourth straight month in April.

“There has been about 100 basis points impact on margins of companies under our coverage universe and 200 basis points impact on margins of Nifty companies,” said Gautam Duggad, head of research at Motilal Oswal Financial Services. The overall results have been in line with expectatio­ns, added Duggad, with performanc­e being led by financials.

Analysts said that while companies in some sectors such as chemicals and fertilizer­s have reported positive earnings surprises and seem to have been able to pass on costs, other sectors such as paints, cement and packaged consumer goods are among the worst hit by the rise in commodity prices and are yet to pass costs to consumers completely.

“Major margin pressure would be visible in Q1 earnings if companies are unable to pass on the input costs, and I believe that companies will pass on 40-50% of the impact of commodity price rise to the buyers and the rest take a hit on hopes of cooling-down of price rise in the short term,” said Prashanth Tapse, vice-president (research), Mehta Equities Ltd.

Input cost pressure has been unpreceden­ted and hence continues to be visible in contractin­g gross margins despite aggressive price increases, said Manish Jain, a fund manager at Ambit Asset Management. Jain said that recent price increases have been able to mitigate the situation, but the impact shall only be partially visible in the June quarter and fully in the following three months.

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