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India Company Profits Rebound After Worst Decline in a Decade

Profits at Indian companies have rebounded from the worst decline in at least a decade amid signs of an economic recovery.

India Company Profits Rebound After Worst Decline in a Decade
Buildings stands in the Malabar Hill area of Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

Profits at Indian companies have rebounded from the worst decline in at least a decade amid signs of an economic recovery.

Aggregate net income of 46 NSE Nifty 50 members grew 4.8% from a year earlier in the quarter through September, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. About two-thirds of the earnings beat or matched analyst estimates, compared with double-digit profit declines in the two previous quarters. By contrast, combined profit for MSCI Asia Pacific constituents remains below year-ago levels.

India Company Profits Rebound After Worst Decline in a Decade

Lenders including ICICI Bank Ltd. and technology firms such as Infosys Ltd. are among those that beat estimates, signaling business conditions are recovering faster than analysts had predicted. Still, while cost-cuts shored up operating profits, sales dipped for many companies from a year ago and the central bank cautioned risks remain even as prospects brightened in October.

“The worst seems to be over with regards to earnings for corporate India,” said Abhimanyu Sofat, head of research at IIFL Securities Ltd. “Companies are cutting costs, discretionary spending has rebounded, and a broad-based recovery is driving markets.”

India’s emergence from the world’s biggest lockdown triggered a revival in demand, even as Asia’s third-largest economy may contract this year for the first time in about four decades. A combination of better-than-expected earnings, completion of U.S. presidential voting and progress toward a Covid-19 vaccine helped propel the Nifty 50 index to new highs for the first three days this week.

Read: India Inc.’s Default Risk Plunges on Improving Economy: Chart

Earnings estimates for the Nifty 50 members have climbed by about 11% from a July low, and the gauge is trading at its highest ever price-to-estimated earnings multiple. Still, analysts expect the index to rise about 8% from Wednesday’s close within a year. Tata Steel Ltd., Oil & Natural Gas Corp., Eicher Motors Ltd. and Grasim Industries Ltd. are scheduled to announce results by the end of this week.

While India has the world’s second-largest coronavirus case count, new daily infections are less than half the peak in mid-September, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Key Highlights

  • Energy and financials posted the best profit growth on average.
    • State-run refiner Indian Oil Corp.’s net income of 62.3 billion rupees ($840 million) compares with 5.63 billion rupees a year earlier as its refineries operated at an average capacity of 93%.
  • Materials and consumer discretionary companies posted the biggest earnings surprises.
  • Most banks beat estimates, buoyed by interest income and lower provisioning as retail lending recovered.
    • ICICI Bank Ltd. posted a record quarterly profit as it set aside fewer provisions for bad loans.
  • Continuing a trend seen in the previous quarter, four of India’s five biggest technology companies beat earnings estimates as clients’ IT spending recovered.
  • Bharti Airtel Ltd. posted one of the biggest earnings disappointments: a surprise quarterly loss as competition hindered tariff increases.

Analyst Comments

  • Analysts expect banks, among the biggest laggards this year, and IT shares to gain as the economy improves and companies continue to digitize their operations.
  • “The economic recovery continues and Covid-19 cases have seen a meaningful decline,” said Gautam Duggad, head of research at Motilal Oswal Securities Ltd. The brokerage remains overweight on IT, banks, health care, telecom and automotive stocks.
  • The “scope for further rerating remains” for India’s top five IT firms, given the demand outlook and potential for companies to adopt cloud storage, Jefferies Financial Group Inc. analysts Akshat Agarwal and Ankur Pant wrote in a note published Sunday.
  • “Private banks should do well considering the risk-reward as they are still at a significant discount to their highs,” said IIFL’s Sofat.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.