Adjusted profits of the 30 Sensex companies declined 2.2 per cent in FY15 as sales grew an anaemic 2.3 per cent. In April last year, analysts had projected a profit growth of 15 per cent.
And, hold your breath, they are now building in a 19 per cent profit growth for Sensex companies in FY16. This is despite the fact that nothing much has changed on the ground and most sectors continue to battle weak demand.
Brokerages, however, have played it safe by saying downside risks remain and further downgrades could happen after the first six months.
Kotak Institutional Equities sees downside risks to its FY16 earnings estimates, as a meaningful recovery in private sector investment is four quarters away. Earnings estimates for 60 per cent of the companies have been downgraded by IIFL and only 25 per cent have seen upgrades. Despite this, the brokerage is estimating a 19 per cent earnings growth for companies under its coverage (excluding energy) in FY16. Motilal Oswal Securities expects Sensex EPS to grow 18 per cent to Rs 1,605.
While IIFL says earnings recovery will be gradual, the brokerage is building in 19 per cent growth in net profit for companies under its coverage (excluding energy). This is predicted on the basis of a revenue growth of 11 per cent in FY16 from 8.8 per cent in FY15 and 90-basis point expansion in operating margin. These might seem very optimistic from the current lows, the IIFL report adds, but the margin expansion would be driven by lower interest costs.
Such earnings projections also disguise the market's valuation, which possibly will prevent a sharper meltdown. Given the current earnings projections, the Sensex trades at a price-earnings multiple of 16.7 times (one-year forward). The number would look very different if one factored in lower earnings. According to Motilal Oswal, BSE Sensex trades at a PE of 16.7x, which is above its historical averages and at a three per cent premium. Its price/book is at its historical average and trades at 2.7x. Sensex return on equity (RoE) at 16.3 per cent is below the long-period average of 18.2 per cent. According to Bloomberg's estimates, Sensex earnings per share is estimated to grow to Rs 1,749 in FY16, a 40 per cent growth from FY15's Rs 1,250. Clearly, sharper downgrades are likely in the days to come.
Given this backdrop, India's claim of being the fastest-growing economy in the world seems an empty boast, if the decline in corporate earnings is anything to go by. In the first quarter itself, risks to the economy have increased. A consecutive year of weak monsoon will have a collateral damage on rural India.
NUMBER GAME
- FY15 Sensex EPS up 2% y-o-y to Rs 1,250
- FY16 Sensex EPS expected to grow 18% to Rs 1,605
- FY17 Sensex EPS expected to grow 23% to Rs 1,979
- FY16 earnings projections cut for Tata Steel (-31%), Coal India (-19%), Sun Pharma (-18%), Tata Motors (-10%) and Hero MotoCorp (-9%).
- FY16 earnings estimates upgraded for Maruti Suzuki (12%), Bharti Airtel (5%), NTPC (4%), Reliance Inds (2%), Vedanta (1%) and BHEL (1%)
Source: Earnings projections by Motilal Oswal Securities
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