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Saturday, September 17, 2005

Suzlon IPO


Suzlon Energy is leveraging on the current euphoria for players involved in the power capex cycle. The issue size is between Rs 1,250 crore and Rs1,500 crore, based on a price band of Rs 425-Rs 510. Based on Suzlon's consolidated earnings per share for FY05, the issue is priced at avaluation of 30 to 36 times. Of course, other power equipment players too enjoy rich valuations. For instance, ABB gets a discounting of about 47times trailing earnings till March 2005 and in case of Siemens India it is41 times.
 
It's important to note here that when private equity investors Citicorp and ChrysCapital had picked up a stake in the company last year (in April and August respectively), the acquisition was at a valuation of about 4-4.5times 12-month earnings till March 2004. In share price terms, Citicorp and ChrysCapital's acquisition price worked out to Rs 24 on an average, andbased on the lower end of the price band of Rs 425, Suzlon's valuation has gone up about 1600 per cent in the past 12-18 months. Earnings, in fact,have risen at a much lower rate of 150 per cent in the year ended March2005.
 
 Merchant bankers to the issue point out that Citicorp and ChrysCapitalinvested in Suzlon while the company was still in its investment phase and were partly responsible for the growth that has occurred since last fiscal.Moreover, although they invested only last year, they had committed capital even earlier. On the other hand, two other foreign investors bought Suzlonshares at an average Rs 385.6 a share this year. While that gives some comfort, the fact that the company's valuations have increased sharply inthe past 12 to 18 months is a cause for concern. Assuming that the highgrowth in the past two years continues, the stock would look reasonablypriced on forward PE multiple basis.
 
 Suzlon is one of the largest players in the domestic wind turbinegenerators segment, with a 42 per cent market share. A key growth impetusfor Suzlon has been rising cost of inputs such as coal in conventionalpower generating equipment and the resulting need for user industries toevaluate alternative energy sources. Riding piggyback on this, thecompany's revenues grew 126 per cent and profit before tax and exceptional items grew 227 per cent to Rs 397.3 crore in FY05. Profit growth hasexceeded income growth thanks to efficiencies realised in the southern partof the country from the setting up of a factory in Pondicherry. Operatingprofit margin grew 723 basis points to 24.14 per cent in the previousfinancial year.
 
 An energy consultant BTM Consult ApS has estimated that installed windpower capacity in the country is set to grow at a compound annual growthrate of 23 per cent from CY05 levels to 8300 mw by CY09. The company plansto use part of the resources (about 50-60 per cent) raised via its floatfor expanding its manufacturing facilities, capitalisation of subsidiaries,redemption of preference shares allotted to private equity investors andsetting up a corporate learning centre.
 
 A key concern, going forward, remains the government policy on fiscal andtax benefits to promote alternate energy sources. For instance, in FY03,the company's net sales had halved on a y-o-y basis to Rs 269.7 crore, oneof the main reasons being the uncertainty relating to announcements of new depreciation rates. The company's profit before tax and exceptional itemshad fallen 81.7 per cent to Rs 22.7 crore. Senior company management highlighted that alternative energy sources are now cost-effective thanksto advances in technology and the importance of fiscal and tax benefits has been declining.

CapitalMarkets

Thursday, September 15, 2005

Enam Securities - India Strategy


Download this extensive report from Enam here

Prabudas Liladar - Rolta India


Prabhudas Liladhar Recommends Buy On Rolta India Ltd @ 163 With Target Price 300

Download here

Monday, September 12, 2005

Sunday, September 11, 2005

Hindu Businessline Recommendations


BUY    >> Timken India, Emco, Grasim, Kajaria Ceramics

HOLD  >> Glenmark, Jindal Saw, Tanfac Industries


Saturday, September 10, 2005

Narmada Gelatines


Up for grabs
Two strong contenders to acquire Narmada Gelatines are Bharti Healthcare and Sterling Biotech. If the deal with Bharti Healthcare takes place then Narmada's production advantage will be difficult to evaluate due to part captive usage. Although Bharti Healthcare has expertise in gelatine capsules manufacture, yet the gelatine manufacturing business will be a whole new ball game for it. Compared to this Sterling Biotech has over a decade's experience in the gelatine manufacturing industry and has been able to maintain a high operating margin of 47% against that of 10% for Narmada Gelatines


Motilal Oswal - Bharti Tele


Motilal Oswal Recommends Buy On BhartiTele @ 330 With Target Price 375

Download here

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Irrational Exuberance


It was Alan Greenspan who is reputed to have used these words in 1995 when the Dow was around 7500. Later the phrase passed into everyday lexicon when Robert Shiller produced his seminal book on the ongoing subsequent irrationality. And now Mr Chidambaram may have set the cat among the pigeons by saying something (in hushed tones) to the same effect and at the same Sensex value.

Coincidence? Sure. We see unfolding before us almost the same story here in India making you realise how "history does not repeat itself but it sure rhymes".

Mr Greenspan of course wasn't quite right. The Irrational Exuberance did not stop at 7500. US Markets rose nearly 60per cent before falling off the biggest asset bubble in the history of mankind.

Five years and a number of other bubbles later, India seems to be headed the same way. With bubbles blowing all over the world in housing, in commodities and even in precious metals, we are seeing unprecedented international financial flows.

There is talk in the media about the Japanese rebalancing their Asia portfolio, pulling out from China and pumping unbelievable cash into a much smaller market like India.

The logic being that the Japanese have zero cost of capital and find Indian P-Es low enough to invest. After all, what are their options? To buy T-Bills denominated in a heavily depreciating dollar, or to invest in the heavily over valued Euro?

It makes far more sense to invest in the world's only domestic-led growth story, probably the only part of the world which is not part of the US-China current account deficit imbroglio. When this structural imbalance unravels, any large investor like the Japanese banks will be left with massive portfolio losses. India, therefore, is a safe haven - this is the logic of the Japanese flows.

But look at it from India's point of view. You have an excess of cash that is flooding in, funding bubbles across all sectors. This cash will seep into other markets funding bubbles in real estate (e.g. Gurgaon and even Delhi are already running at more than 7 years income and a rental yield of 2per cent).

So what does poor Mr Chidambaram do? His small voice of sanity is hopelessly drowned in the chorus of protest from bullish investors who cannot see this party spoilt. He is like the arrack-shop owner who knows that you need a bouncer to stop a person after his 12th peg. The bullish consensus and the need for liquidity-fuelled overvaluation is now so strong that there are simply too many vested interests involved. The mutual fund industry, the FIIs, promoters of companies who need to make placements, and of course the public-at-large. There is almost no one who does not have a vested interest in bullishness.

But what is the objective of the regulator? He is supposed to aid price discovery and is supposed to cool any excessive distortions. Is anybody in India other than poor Mr Chidambaram concerned about the long-term damage this excess liquidity will do first to the stock market, and then after the asset bubble collapse, to the economy at large?

Let us go back to Mr Greenspan. After the 2000 asset price collapse, he did say that it was only possible for a regulator "to see a bubble after the fact (ie, after it has burst)". There have been few comments by central bankers as hilarious as this one. With this Pontius Pilate-like comment, Mr Greenspan washed his hands of any responsibility for what happened subsequently to the American economy. History will not judge him lightly.

No Indian politician can routinely be courageous (or he will not be a politician for long). But Mr Chidambaram is at the crossroads. Is he mustering up the courage to come down hard on almost every participant in the market and soak up liquidity through a sharp hike in interest rates or other stratagems? Or does he let the party continue? This may be just the start of a bubble that can take on unimaginable proportions.

When going into the details, company by company, I can just point to a few examples of the frenzy evident in the markets:

A) Interest rates, oil prices and auto stocks went up on the same day.

B) Companies which have never delivered an ROCE above 11 per cent are today quoted at 25 times forward earnings.

C) Temporary spikes in earnings and cash flows are discounted into forward earnings as if they are forever. In fact a growth rate is imbued into them. This is similar to the IT boom of 2000, when valuations were based on extrapolating current growth rates to infinity.

India is not a mature economy, Indians are not mature economic players and our country simply does not have the institutional infrastructure (or even the international standing) to soften an asset-price collapse in the manner that Mr Greenspan has done. There will be no bonds we can issue which will be picked up by willing foreigners who have a vested interest in the stability of our currency. The consequences would be closer to East Asia (crisis) than to America. If this trend is not arrested, I see a 1992-like situation with major bankruptcy spreading out into the retail segment followed by a fracturing of the ongoing housing bubble.

The top of every bull market is marked by scams, small and big. You can see them sprouting all over the place, simply too numerous to recount. They can come from mis-stated earnings, over-hyped news, multiple announcements of old-hat news, co-ordinated trading between institutions and operators….all of these simply impossible to "prove" except by anecdotal evidence. Recently, we saw bears getting squeezed out of a number of fundamentally weak stocks, that should be dropping in value.

This is a rare situation when the regulator needs to take an intelligent, broader view of markets. Just like the RBI intervenes in forex markets, or like in 1996, when Mr Manmohan Singh squeezed out excess liquidity to slow down a capex boom; we need a move to slow down this liquidity-driven rally.

If left unchecked, the market would move into territory where sentiment becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. "Stock prices go up because stocks prices are going up". Such uni-directional sentiment cannot be healthy for the markets, or later the economy.

If the same phenomenon had been observed on the opposite side, ie, excessive and rampant bearishness, the government would have looked for scapegoats. Rather like it went after some brokers, merely because they had short-sold stock at the end of the IT boom. Somehow, it is virtuous to defend "bullishness", but it is okay to let bears be killed. This logic is flawed. Contrarians are the anti-bodies who keep the system healthy…killing them cannot be good for the markets.

The regulator should engineer a slowdown in hot FII inflows, or make them "sticky" (maybe with an "exit tax"). This will keep hot money out, and ensure relatively longer-term investments.

(Sanjeev Pandiya is a contrarian who invests, teaches at XIM and works in the auto ancilliary sector. He can be contacted at spandiya@hotmail.com)

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

How to make a killing in IPOs - CapitalMarket


Investing in a primary offer is often touted to be less risky than buyingshares in the secondary markets. That is because invariably companies comeout with public offers to fund their growth plans. Since the cost ofraising loans is higher for younger companies, they opt for equity.
 
 From an investor's viewpoint, the idea is really to invest in a companywhen it is still at the nascent stage and holds promise for growth. Andprimary offers are also meant to leave some money on the table as a rewardfor investors who keep faith in the stock even before the company hasproved its worth.
 
 But most investors today subscribe to initial public offers (IPO) not tohold the stocks for a life-time, or even for a couple of years or months.Instead, they look to make a quick buck by selling their shares as soon asthe stock hits the bourses. As more and more individual and institutionalinvestors try to exit the counter on the very first day of listing, thestock goes through wild price swings. The volatility at the HT Mediacounter which made its debut on the bourses on Thursday last week is aclear indication of this trend. The stock which was issued at a price of Rs530, opened at Rs 685 and surged to an intra-day high of Rs 731 beforeclosing at Rs 557. A total of 199 lakh shares were traded, significantlymore than the 76.9 lakh shares issued in the public issue.
 
 How does one maximise gains from an IPO if the idea is to make some quickbucks? Here are a few things you should keep track of.
 
 Investors would do well to remember that stocks which are overpriced tobegin with may attract short sellers on listing. Conventional measures suchas the price-earnings multiple - something one looks at while decidingwhether or not to buy a share - should be an indication of whether thestock price is sustainable.
 
 But then, it is not just the valuation. Like any other commodity, stockprices are also influenced by the forces of demand and supply which may inthe short run deviate from the intrinsic worth of the stock. If there is ahuge demand for stocks - you can gauge the demand from the oversubscriptionnumbers - investors who got lesser allocations than desired may go on abuying spree in the secondary markets the moment the stock lists. Earlier,subscription numbers were exaggerated because of unscrupulous bids put inby institutional bidders. However, with the Securities and Exchange Boardof India (Sebi) recently introducing upfront margin payment while placingbids, the subscription figures should be a decent indicator of genuinedemand.
 
 The third point is the level of leveraged positions. This is a significantfactor that influences the stock price movement on Day 1. In other words,leveraged positions indicate proportion of investors who subscribed to theissue with borrowed money.
 
 Since the interest meter keeps running, leveraged investors usually look toexit the stock and take home whatever they can in double quick time. Thereis no way of finding out what portion of an issue is funded throughborrowed capital. All you need to do is to follow news papers and talk toyour stock broker.
 
 This is how it works. Assume that an investor avails of 100 per centborrowing to apply for share of ABC company priced at Rs 500. At aninterest rate of 12 per cent, if the investor borrows for one and a halfmonth, which is the case usually, the interest cost would be Rs 750. Now ifthe issue is oversubscribed 10 times, it would mean that every investorwould get only one-tenth of what he applied for. So instead of 100 shares,the investor is allotted only 10 shares. Dividing the interest cost of Rs750 by the number of shares allotted, the cost that has to be recovered pershare is Rs 75.
 
 The investor would make money only when the share prices goes beyond Rs575. So Rs 575 is an important threshold level beyond which leveragedinvestors would look to sell.
 
 Usually shares open high and head higher as leveraged investors try toartificially push up demand in an attempt to get "decent" exits, and thestock finds its level based on genuine buying interest. If the stockbreaches this threshold level, the fall can be precipitous.

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Monday, September 05, 2005

Delhi Privatization: Success or Failure


Motilal Oswal Report on Delhi Privatization: Success or Failure

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Sunday, September 04, 2005

Wind Energy - Sharekhan Special


Wind energy: it is windy
Wind energy has registered a robust year-on-year growth of 44% in FY2005. The current installations in the country are approximately 3,595 megawatt (MW). The ministry of non-conventional energy has estimated that by 2012, 10% of the projected 240,000MW of the new capacity will come from renewables-mainly wind power. We are very positive on the sector since the wind power industry is on a high growth trajectory. The beneficiaries will be major suppliers of wind turbines like Suzlon, Enercon and NEPC and auxiliary service providers like Sanghvi Movers and Kemrock Industries.


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Hindu Businessline Recommendations


BUY    >> Sanghvi Motors, GE Shipping, Satnam Overseas

HOLD  >> Essar Steel, Aurobhindo Pharma, Clariant, Color Chem, Vanavil Dyes


Friday, September 02, 2005

Small-world effect


CONSIDER this. You receive private information that a certain stock is likely to move up. You share this information with your friend. Two days later, you find that the volumes have increased five-fold and the stock has hit the upper circuit! You wonder how the market knew about the stock. Such phenomenon can be explained by the small-world effect.

At a birthday party, you meet a person for the first time. After a couple of minutes, you find that you are related to that person, or that both of you come from the same hometown. You conclude that the world is indeed small!

In the mid-1960s, Stanley Milgram, then at the Harvard University, performed an experiment to test the small-world effect.

Suppose you give an unaddressed letter to your neighbour, asking him to give it to someone he thinks may know your friend in the US. Based on the experiments conducted by Milgram and others, chances are that your friend will receive the letter by the time it changes six hands. This came to be famously called as the six degrees of separation.

Academicians have applied these experiments to study networks. What if we want to connect various towns across the State?

The small-world effect shows that you need not build roads linking each town to every other town. Paul Erdos, the famous Hungarian mathematician, computed the minimum number required to link any network. Interestingly, the minimum number gets smaller, larger the network.

Now, we know that the investors' network is large. Your friend may have told his friend who, in turn, may have told some others. Soon, the message may have passed on to the entire market. That is, perhaps, why no market information remains private for a long time.

Hindu Business Line