Q1FY25 Review: Nifty 50 delivered a four per cent year-on-year (YoY) growth in the April-June quarter of fiscal 2024-25 (Q1FY25), slightly higher than most D-Street estimates. At five per cent, the NSE benchmark reported the first quarter of a single-digit EBITDA growth in four years in the quarter under review. The last time when the benchmark posted a single-digit EBITDA growth was in September 2020.
According to domestic brokerage Motilal Oswal Financial Services, the net profit of four per cent is the lowest since the COVID-19 pandemic quarter (June 2020). The overall growth in the first quarter of the current fiscal was primarily propelled by domestic cyclicals. The notable contributions were witnessed from the healthcare, real estate, capital goods, and metals sectors.
The aggregate performance was hit by a drag from oil marketing companies (OMCs). Five Nifty companies – HDFC Bank, Tata Motors, ICICI Bank, Maruti Suzuki, and TCS – contributed 127 per cent of the incremental YoY accretion in earnings. Conversely, BPCL, JSW Steel, ONGC, Reliance Industries, and Grasim Industries contributed adversely to the Nifty earnings.
According to domestic brokerage Elara Securities (India) Pvt Ltd, the auto sector surpassed expectations, with most companies, except for commercial vehicles and tire plays, seeing a decent YoY growth.
The banking sector modestly exceeded the brokerage's tempered expectations despite facing headwinds. However, challenges persist with sluggish deposit momentum exerting pressure on net interest margins (NIMs) and signs of moderation in the unsecured loan segment.
The long-anticipated rural consumption recovery shows promising signs for the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector. While FY24 earnings growth was driven by price increases, volume-led growth is expected to be the norm going forward. Although rural growth still lags urban on two-year CAGR basis, it has picked up YoY while urban growth has slowed.
For Pharma, earnings growth of ~28 per cent YoY marginally exceeded the brokerage's projections, but performance varied across the sector. The US generics business remains the primary growth driver, even as CDMO companies face persistent challenges. Major hospital chains showed early signs of growth deceleration and margin pressure.
Commodity-oriented sectors experienced a modest topline growth but saw earnings decline by ~27 per cent owing to margin pressure. The energy pack registered a 30 per cemt earnings drop, attributed to lower gross refining margin, decreased retail diesel margin for OMCs, and weaker performance in Reliance Industries’ oil-to-chemicals segment. Steel and cement companies were hit by weak hot rolled coil prices and cement prices respectively.
According to Motilal Oswal, the Nifty EPS estimate for FY25 was cut by 1.7 per cent to ₹1,115, largely owing to Reliance Industries, Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), and Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL).
‘’FY26E EPS was also trimmed by one per cent to ₹1,316 (from ₹1,330) as upgrades in Infosys, Coal India, Tata Motors, and Maruti Suzuki were offset by downgrades in ONGC, Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, and IndusInd Bank. Positive on auto, capital goods, FMCG, energy, pharma, real estate,'' said the brokerage.
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According to Elara Capital, valuations remain the focal point, with indices trading at premium levels, sustained by strong earnings delivery. While the banks do face pressure, this is largely priced in. The outlook for capital goods and infrastructure remains positive as election-related softness subsides.
‘’Above-average monsoons align with IMD forecasts, potentially boosting rural consumption and benefiting FMCG and small-ticket white goods sectors. We maintain our positive stance on Autos, Capital Goods, FMCG, Energy, Pharma, and Real Estate. Our outlook is negative for Cement, Chemicals, and Metals, while remaining neutral for other sectors,'' said Elara Capital.
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