Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Q2 net profits dive as input costs bite

- Ujjval Jauhari ujjval.jauhari@livmeint.com

NEW DELHI: Persistent inflationa­ry pressures squeezed earnings of Indian companies in the September quarter, even as revenue grew robustly, indicating demand, at least in urban areas, remained intact despite price increases.

September quarter profit plummeted 25% to levels not seen since the peak covid quarter of April-June 2021 as raw material costs surged 45% from a year earlier, a Mint analysis of 2,923 companies (excluding financials and banks) showed. However, with commodity costs softening, companies will likely see profit rebound in the coming quarters.

Net sales, however, increased 29% from the previous year, Mint data showed, indicating consumer demand remained strong despite inflation and geopolitic­al uncertaint­ies.

Mitul Shah, head of research at Reliance Securities, said that the fiscal second-quarter earnings season ended with healthy revenue growth, but inflationa­ry pressures impacted profitabil­ity.

While operating profits declined 8.64% from a year earlier, higher interest costs squeezed net profits further.

HDFC Securities’ head of retail research, Deepak Jasani, said that higher interest rates resulted in increased costs of borrowing working capital.

Companies tried to pass on costs to consumers by raising prices, resulting in revenue growth, but volume growth suffered.

A multi-year low in gross margin forced companies to cut marketing spending. Rural demand remains weak, with no signs of recovery in sight over the next few months, but urban and discretion­ary demand is holding up well. Rural demand continues to suffer from high inflation, he said.

Manish Jain, a fund manager at Ambit Asset Management, said that “the only surprise was that rural markets may be witnessing some early signs of a slowdown”.

However, there were some silver linings as well. Banks continued to witness strong credit growth, and IT sector deal wins remained steady despite fears of a slowdown in Western markets.

“Earnings momentum has moved towards banking and industrial­s from IT companies and metals. Most of the banks’ earnings were at historic highs. Defence equipment manufactur­ers also did fairly well,” said Nishit Master, a portfolio manager at Axis Securities.

The banking sector saw healthy loan growth, net interest margin (NIM) expansion and continued moderation in provisions. Automakers, financials and industrial and engineerin­g companies witnessed upgrades.

Sectors such as commoditie­s, manufactur­ing, and even IT services, however, saw downgrades, according to Shah.

The cement sector was one of the biggest drags, with earnings tumbling by around 75% over the previous year, led by input cost pressures, pointed Jasani.

Imported coal (freight on board Australia) and domestic pet coke prices rose by over 125% and 35% from a year earlier, respective­ly, in the September quarter, leading to rising power and fuel costs and impacting many other sectors, including metals.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The cement sector was one of the biggest drag.
REUTERS The cement sector was one of the biggest drag.

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