Category

India

Brief India: Indian Election Antics and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. Indian Election Antics
  2. GEM Active Funds:  Big Q1 Outperformance
  3. Last Week in GER Research: Huya, Bilibili and Qutoutiao
  4. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future
  5. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG

1. Indian Election Antics

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India is in an election year. Sensibility has gone out of the window, replaced by fantastical promises and irresponsible spending. If the Modi government is desperate hold on to power, the Congress Party is equally determine to wrest power away. And then there is the RBI, which working hand in glove with the government, cut policy rates again this month. We hope that cooler heads and more importantly objectivity will prevail once the elections are over, but further interest rate cuts cannot be ruled out at this stage. It follows that the rupee is vulnerable. We reiterate our underweight Indian equities call.

2. GEM Active Funds:  Big Q1 Outperformance

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Global Emerging Market funds made a strong start to 2019, with just over two-thirds of funds outperforming the benchmark, generating an average alpha above the IShares MSCI Emerging Markets Indx (ETF) (EEM US) of 1.3%.

In this report, we look at the performance of 180 global emerging market strategies over the first quarter of 2019 and analyse the countries, sectors and stocks that helped generate that outperformance.  We also take a look at the longer-dated outperformance of active GEM funds.

3. Last Week in GER Research: Huya, Bilibili and Qutoutiao

Below is a recap of the key IPO/placement research produced by the Global Equity Research team. This week, we update on the bevvy of placements offered by various companies. After placements by Pinduoduo (PDD US) and Sea Ltd (SE US) , we saw more offerings from HUYA Inc (HUYA US) , Bilibili Inc (BILI US) and Qutoutiao Inc (QTT US). We update on these three offerings and perhaps big picture, this could reflect a signalling inflection point in these shares. More details below 

In addition, we have provided an updated calendar of upcoming catalysts for EVENT driven names below. 

Best of luck for the new week – Arun, Venkat and Rickin

4. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future

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This Insight has been produced jointly by William Keating at Ingenuity and Mio Kato, CFA and Aqila Ali at LightStream Research.

The Insight is structured as follows:

  • A. Key  Conclusions
  • B. Report Highlights
  • C.History of Electric Vehicles
  • E. History of Rechargeable Battery Technologies And An In-Depth Analysis on Li-ion Batteries
  • F. Batteries Beyond Li-ion
  • G. Supply Constraints for Key Raw Materials
  • H. The Competitive Landscape

A. Key  Conclusions

Global sales of EV’s reached 2m units in 2018. As a base case scenario, we expect a combination of improving EV battery cost-effectiveness, increasingly challenging emissions standards and ongoing incentives by various governments to propel unit sales to 8m units annually by 2025. Against this, we consider battery material price increases, a reduction of EV incentives in the US and China and political and environmental risks from the mining of metals used in batteries as downside risks which could delay the growth of the EV market.

Surprisingly, the EV battery technology that will drive us towards that 8m unit goal is still very much a work in progress. While Lithium Ion is the by far the dominant technology, there are striking differences between variants of the technology, battery pack design, battery management systems and manufacturing scale between the leading contenders. Furthermore, while there’s nothing on the horizon to completely displace Lithium Ion within the next decade, it remains unclear whether the technology will be the one to achieve the $100/kWh price target that would make the EV cost-neutral compared to its internal combustion predecessors. 

Quite apart from the technology,  the EV battery segment faces other significant challenges including increasing costs for core materials such as Cobalt, increasing safety concerns as the mix of that very same cobalt is reduced in the cathode, the growing risk of litigation amidst a fiercely competitive environment and last but not least, the appetite of various governments to maintain a favourable subsidy framework. 

5. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG

Cscupdated

The JKM has halved its value since December, continuing its steady decline and dropping below the TTF, the benchmark for European LNG prices. Asian LNG spot prices are now at their lowest level since May 2015. While a prolonged LNG price downturn could force many projects to be cancelled, the winners among the developers are starting to emerge, aggressively pushing ahead their projects closer to the final investment decision.

Both Tellurian Inc (TELL US) and NextDecade Corp (NEXT US) signed high-profile deals, respectively with Total Sa (FP FP) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN), that could significantly de-risk their proposed LNG projects and increase the probability to reach FID in 2019. In Russia, LNG newcomer Novatek PJSC (NVTK LI) agreed two long-term offtake deals with Repsol SA (REP SM) and Vitol thereby moving a step closer to FID its Arctic LNG 2 project.

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Brief India: Global Capital Flows Show China’s Collapsing Export Markets Could Soon Revive and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. Global Capital Flows Show China’s Collapsing Export Markets Could Soon Revive

1. Global Capital Flows Show China’s Collapsing Export Markets Could Soon Revive

Shipping

  • Capital flows are strongly Granger causal
  • Gross capital flows lead World shipping activity by 4 months
  • Capital flows have been slowly rising since June 2018: in February they jumped
  • Reinforces out pro-Asia and pro-China investment message

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief India: GEM Active Funds:  Big Q1 Outperformance and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. GEM Active Funds:  Big Q1 Outperformance
  2. Last Week in GER Research: Huya, Bilibili and Qutoutiao
  3. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future
  4. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG
  5. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound

1. GEM Active Funds:  Big Q1 Outperformance

Long term

Global Emerging Market funds made a strong start to 2019, with just over two-thirds of funds outperforming the benchmark, generating an average alpha above the IShares MSCI Emerging Markets Indx (ETF) (EEM US) of 1.3%.

In this report, we look at the performance of 180 global emerging market strategies over the first quarter of 2019 and analyse the countries, sectors and stocks that helped generate that outperformance.  We also take a look at the longer-dated outperformance of active GEM funds.

2. Last Week in GER Research: Huya, Bilibili and Qutoutiao

Below is a recap of the key IPO/placement research produced by the Global Equity Research team. This week, we update on the bevvy of placements offered by various companies. After placements by Pinduoduo (PDD US) and Sea Ltd (SE US) , we saw more offerings from HUYA Inc (HUYA US) , Bilibili Inc (BILI US) and Qutoutiao Inc (QTT US). We update on these three offerings and perhaps big picture, this could reflect a signalling inflection point in these shares. More details below 

In addition, we have provided an updated calendar of upcoming catalysts for EVENT driven names below. 

Best of luck for the new week – Arun, Venkat and Rickin

3. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future

Pic%2032

This Insight has been produced jointly by William Keating at Ingenuity and Mio Kato, CFA and Aqila Ali at LightStream Research.

The Insight is structured as follows:

  • A. Key  Conclusions
  • B. Report Highlights
  • C.History of Electric Vehicles
  • E. History of Rechargeable Battery Technologies And An In-Depth Analysis on Li-ion Batteries
  • F. Batteries Beyond Li-ion
  • G. Supply Constraints for Key Raw Materials
  • H. The Competitive Landscape

A. Key  Conclusions

Global sales of EV’s reached 2m units in 2018. As a base case scenario, we expect a combination of improving EV battery cost-effectiveness, increasingly challenging emissions standards and ongoing incentives by various governments to propel unit sales to 8m units annually by 2025. Against this, we consider battery material price increases, a reduction of EV incentives in the US and China and political and environmental risks from the mining of metals used in batteries as downside risks which could delay the growth of the EV market.

Surprisingly, the EV battery technology that will drive us towards that 8m unit goal is still very much a work in progress. While Lithium Ion is the by far the dominant technology, there are striking differences between variants of the technology, battery pack design, battery management systems and manufacturing scale between the leading contenders. Furthermore, while there’s nothing on the horizon to completely displace Lithium Ion within the next decade, it remains unclear whether the technology will be the one to achieve the $100/kWh price target that would make the EV cost-neutral compared to its internal combustion predecessors. 

Quite apart from the technology,  the EV battery segment faces other significant challenges including increasing costs for core materials such as Cobalt, increasing safety concerns as the mix of that very same cobalt is reduced in the cathode, the growing risk of litigation amidst a fiercely competitive environment and last but not least, the appetite of various governments to maintain a favourable subsidy framework. 

4. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG

Cscupdated

The JKM has halved its value since December, continuing its steady decline and dropping below the TTF, the benchmark for European LNG prices. Asian LNG spot prices are now at their lowest level since May 2015. While a prolonged LNG price downturn could force many projects to be cancelled, the winners among the developers are starting to emerge, aggressively pushing ahead their projects closer to the final investment decision.

Both Tellurian Inc (TELL US) and NextDecade Corp (NEXT US) signed high-profile deals, respectively with Total Sa (FP FP) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN), that could significantly de-risk their proposed LNG projects and increase the probability to reach FID in 2019. In Russia, LNG newcomer Novatek PJSC (NVTK LI) agreed two long-term offtake deals with Repsol SA (REP SM) and Vitol thereby moving a step closer to FID its Arctic LNG 2 project.

5. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound

India inflaton policyrate

We expect the RBI’s MPC to cut the policy (repo) rate by 25bp on 4th April, thereby unwinding the policy error it made last year by raising the repo rate by 50bp — on the basis of an utterly erroneous inflation forecast. (Our view was: RBI Raises Rates, but Will Likely Look Foolish when Inflation Moderates). Between November 2018 and January 2019, India’s real policy rate was consequently well above +4%. Even after tomorrow’s rate cut, India’s real interest rate will be among the highest in the world — and so the appropriate cut on 4th April would have been 50bp. Real GDP has decelerated to 6.6% and is set to decelerate further in the Jan-Mar19 quarter, and the decline in imports over the past 3 months provides additional evidence for the slowdown. 

However, India’s external sector is likely to lead the recovery over the next few quarters. FDI inflows averaged US$33.63bn annually in the first 4 years of NDA2 (the Modi administration), up from US$18.19bn in the previous 4 years. In April-December 2018, FDI inflows have risen to US$44.7bn. Meanwhile, the current account deficit was 2.4% of GDP in 2018 (calendar year), the largest during the Modi years, but is likely to shrink to 1% of GDP in January-March 2019. (During UPA2, the current account deficit was consistently above 2.6% of GDP, peaking at above 5% of GDP in 2012). The improved basic balance will lay the basis for a modestly stronger rupee that allows the RBI to pursue more aggressive monetary easing over the next few meetings. 

India’s exports grew 12.7% in 2017, 10% in 2018 and are up 3.1% YoY in Jan-Feb 2019. The latter seems unremarkable, except for the fact that Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore are all seeing their exports decline at a double-digit YoY pace over the past 4 months (and China’s exports are down 5.3% YoY in the latest 3 months) amid a renewed slump in global trade. In fact, India’s goods exports have grown faster than China’s for the past 3 years. In the last 3 months, India’s electronics exports (albeit only 3.3% of total goods exports) were up more than 50% YoY (amid a cyclical decline in global electronics demand!). Something big is beginning to stir in India, and it is not just the momentum in the election rallies!  

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief India: Last Week in GER Research: Huya, Bilibili and Qutoutiao and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. Last Week in GER Research: Huya, Bilibili and Qutoutiao
  2. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future
  3. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG
  4. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound
  5. What Next in the Inflation / Deflation Debate and What Does It Mean for Asset Prices?

1. Last Week in GER Research: Huya, Bilibili and Qutoutiao

Below is a recap of the key IPO/placement research produced by the Global Equity Research team. This week, we update on the bevvy of placements offered by various companies. After placements by Pinduoduo (PDD US) and Sea Ltd (SE US) , we saw more offerings from HUYA Inc (HUYA US) , Bilibili Inc (BILI US) and Qutoutiao Inc (QTT US). We update on these three offerings and perhaps big picture, this could reflect a signalling inflection point in these shares. More details below 

In addition, we have provided an updated calendar of upcoming catalysts for EVENT driven names below. 

Best of luck for the new week – Arun, Venkat and Rickin

2. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future

Pic%2023

This Insight has been produced jointly by William Keating at Ingenuity and Mio Kato, CFA and Aqila Ali at LightStream Research.

The Insight is structured as follows:

  • A. Key  Conclusions
  • B. Report Highlights
  • C.History of Electric Vehicles
  • E. History of Rechargeable Battery Technologies And An In-Depth Analysis on Li-ion Batteries
  • F. Batteries Beyond Li-ion
  • G. Supply Constraints for Key Raw Materials
  • H. The Competitive Landscape

A. Key  Conclusions

Global sales of EV’s reached 2m units in 2018. As a base case scenario, we expect a combination of improving EV battery cost-effectiveness, increasingly challenging emissions standards and ongoing incentives by various governments to propel unit sales to 8m units annually by 2025. Against this, we consider battery material price increases, a reduction of EV incentives in the US and China and political and environmental risks from the mining of metals used in batteries as downside risks which could delay the growth of the EV market.

Surprisingly, the EV battery technology that will drive us towards that 8m unit goal is still very much a work in progress. While Lithium Ion is the by far the dominant technology, there are striking differences between variants of the technology, battery pack design, battery management systems and manufacturing scale between the leading contenders. Furthermore, while there’s nothing on the horizon to completely displace Lithium Ion within the next decade, it remains unclear whether the technology will be the one to achieve the $100/kWh price target that would make the EV cost-neutral compared to its internal combustion predecessors. 

Quite apart from the technology,  the EV battery segment faces other significant challenges including increasing costs for core materials such as Cobalt, increasing safety concerns as the mix of that very same cobalt is reduced in the cathode, the growing risk of litigation amidst a fiercely competitive environment and last but not least, the appetite of various governments to maintain a favourable subsidy framework. 

3. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG

Cscupdated

The JKM has halved its value since December, continuing its steady decline and dropping below the TTF, the benchmark for European LNG prices. Asian LNG spot prices are now at their lowest level since May 2015. While a prolonged LNG price downturn could force many projects to be cancelled, the winners among the developers are starting to emerge, aggressively pushing ahead their projects closer to the final investment decision.

Both Tellurian Inc (TELL US) and NextDecade Corp (NEXT US) signed high-profile deals, respectively with Total Sa (FP FP) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN), that could significantly de-risk their proposed LNG projects and increase the probability to reach FID in 2019. In Russia, LNG newcomer Novatek PJSC (NVTK LI) agreed two long-term offtake deals with Repsol SA (REP SM) and Vitol thereby moving a step closer to FID its Arctic LNG 2 project.

4. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound

India inflaton policyrate

We expect the RBI’s MPC to cut the policy (repo) rate by 25bp on 4th April, thereby unwinding the policy error it made last year by raising the repo rate by 50bp — on the basis of an utterly erroneous inflation forecast. (Our view was: RBI Raises Rates, but Will Likely Look Foolish when Inflation Moderates). Between November 2018 and January 2019, India’s real policy rate was consequently well above +4%. Even after tomorrow’s rate cut, India’s real interest rate will be among the highest in the world — and so the appropriate cut on 4th April would have been 50bp. Real GDP has decelerated to 6.6% and is set to decelerate further in the Jan-Mar19 quarter, and the decline in imports over the past 3 months provides additional evidence for the slowdown. 

However, India’s external sector is likely to lead the recovery over the next few quarters. FDI inflows averaged US$33.63bn annually in the first 4 years of NDA2 (the Modi administration), up from US$18.19bn in the previous 4 years. In April-December 2018, FDI inflows have risen to US$44.7bn. Meanwhile, the current account deficit was 2.4% of GDP in 2018 (calendar year), the largest during the Modi years, but is likely to shrink to 1% of GDP in January-March 2019. (During UPA2, the current account deficit was consistently above 2.6% of GDP, peaking at above 5% of GDP in 2012). The improved basic balance will lay the basis for a modestly stronger rupee that allows the RBI to pursue more aggressive monetary easing over the next few meetings. 

India’s exports grew 12.7% in 2017, 10% in 2018 and are up 3.1% YoY in Jan-Feb 2019. The latter seems unremarkable, except for the fact that Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore are all seeing their exports decline at a double-digit YoY pace over the past 4 months (and China’s exports are down 5.3% YoY in the latest 3 months) amid a renewed slump in global trade. In fact, India’s goods exports have grown faster than China’s for the past 3 years. In the last 3 months, India’s electronics exports (albeit only 3.3% of total goods exports) were up more than 50% YoY (amid a cyclical decline in global electronics demand!). Something big is beginning to stir in India, and it is not just the momentum in the election rallies!  

5. What Next in the Inflation / Deflation Debate and What Does It Mean for Asset Prices?

Despite some signs of stabilization in China’s factory gauges the primary trend is still weakness and it might be rash for investors to read too much into the recent data given the apparent weakness in the Eurozone and the moderation form a high level of growth in the United States.  Quantitative tightening is on hold in the United States but a sharp “U-turn” to easing has not happened yet and is politically embarrassing. As inflation falls real rates are rising. Housing markets are showing signs of price weakness. Investors need to watch for signs of credit quality decay that could be an indicator of the next period of severe financial distress. 

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Brief India: Why Did Bank Credit to NBFCs Spurt in September, and Shrink in January? and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. Why Did Bank Credit to NBFCs Spurt in September, and Shrink in January?
  2. Bharti Infratel: Bad News Largely in the Price Now. Upgrade to Neutral
  3. Weekly Oil Views: Crude Eyes Tightening Supply but in the Shadow of Gloom
  4. Global Capital Flows Show China’s Collapsing Export Markets Could Soon Revive

1. Why Did Bank Credit to NBFCs Spurt in September, and Shrink in January?

Nbfc%20bank%20credit%20growth

For the beleaguered non-bank finance company (NBFC) sector, banks are the single largest component of external funding. This source peaked at the end of September 2018, in the aftermath of the default of IL&FS, a private unlisted infrastructure developer and financer.  However, in the beginning of the last quarter of the financial year ended March 31, 2019 (4QFY2019), when bank credit in the economy normally peaks, bank credit to NBFCs (as on January 18, 2019) has declined as compared with the previous month. The sharp spurt in bank credit at end-September probably indicates that NBFCs utilised their sanctioned limits with the banks, and top-rated NBFCs took on excessive bank loans to tide over their asset-liability mis-matches in that period. Subsequently, by early January 2019, banks may not have renewed or rolled over the NBFC bank limits, which led to a drawing down of bank credit. It therefore appears that bank finance will continue to remain tight for NBFCs in the last quarter of FY2019, as they sell their assets to banks and restrict asset growth in order to remain liquid.

2. Bharti Infratel: Bad News Largely in the Price Now. Upgrade to Neutral

Bhin%20exit

Following three years of share price declines, Chris Hoare has started to moderate his negative view on Bharti Infratel (BHIN IN). Our thesis, that Infratel would struggle as the market consolidated to three players, has largely played out. We remain wary of the viability of Vodafone Idea (IDEA IN) at current tariff levels but the ongoing capital raising at IDEA puts off the day of reckoning, while IDEA’s exit penalties (as they consolidate with Vodafone) are being paid quarterly which will flatter revenues/cash flow. We think earnings forecasts have probably bottomed for the time being and raise our recommendation to Neutral and upgrade our price target to INR270 (from INR220).

3. Weekly Oil Views: Crude Eyes Tightening Supply but in the Shadow of Gloom

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Crude has been gradually reconnecting with its supply-demand fundamentals, and the impact of highly disciplined OPEC cuts just two months into the group’s production restraint deal is becoming evident in relatively stable prices. Through much of last week, crude prices firmed and stood their ground even as global stock markets were skidding.

However, oil is not completely out of the shadows of the global economic sentiment. Crude prices were whiplashed last Friday along with the equity markets as a fresh wave of gloom and doom from the European Central Bank’s downward revision of eurozone growth projections rattled investors. Earlier in the week, China set off fresh alarm bells, by officially revising down its 2019 GDP growth target to 6-6.5%, while Premier Li Keqiang warned that the country’s economy faced a “tough struggle” ahead.

Nonetheless, benchmark Brent and WTI  crude futures resisted the lows plumbed during intraday trading Friday, to close marginally higher on the week. While global oil demand growth forecasts remain tentative, supply fundamentals are clearly firming. Output from 11 of OPEC’s 14 members that agreed to collectively curb output by around 812,000 b/d starting January this year almost reached 100% of the target in February.

The race to the compliance finish line was helped by Saudi Arabia, which is slashing its output way beyond its commitment. Meanwhile, the three OPEC members exempted from the latest round of production cuts — Iran, Libya and Venezuela — are also under-delivering. That amounted to OPEC-14 production plunging by around 1.7 million b/d compared with the high of last October.

OPEC will need to be careful not to over-tighten the market, as happened through the first half of last year. We believe the group will be cautious on that front, given its experience of 2018, when it was forced to make two policy U-turns in the space of six months. 

4. Global Capital Flows Show China’s Collapsing Export Markets Could Soon Revive

Shipping

  • Capital flows are strongly Granger causal
  • Gross capital flows lead World shipping activity by 4 months
  • Capital flows have been slowly rising since June 2018: in February they jumped
  • Reinforces out pro-Asia and pro-China investment message

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief India: India Generic Drugs: “Antitrust Unredacted” and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. India Generic Drugs: “Antitrust Unredacted”

1. India Generic Drugs: “Antitrust Unredacted”

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New information in the government’s investigation into antitrust violations by generic drug companies continues to surface. An unredacted version of the Attorneys General complaint was published recently by a health care trade publication. The unredacted portions of the document paint an incriminating picture of the industry, increasing the pressure to settle. The timetable for the process remains open-ended, and manufacturers will be reluctant to raise prices absent documentable product shortages. Among the Indian companies, Sun Pharmaceutical Indus (SUNP IN), Dr. Reddy’S Laboratories (DRRD IN), and Aurobindo Pharma (ARBP IN) feature prominently in the court filings.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief India: India Generic Drugs: “Antitrust Unredacted” and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. India Generic Drugs: “Antitrust Unredacted”
  2. Dabur IN
  3. Dabur IN

1. India Generic Drugs: “Antitrust Unredacted”

Conscious%20of%20guilt%20%231

New information in the government’s investigation into antitrust violations by generic drug companies continues to surface. An unredacted version of the Attorneys General complaint was published recently by a health care trade publication. The unredacted portions of the document paint an incriminating picture of the industry, increasing the pressure to settle. The timetable for the process remains open-ended, and manufacturers will be reluctant to raise prices absent documentable product shortages. Among the Indian companies, Sun Pharmaceutical Indus (SUNP IN), Dr. Reddy’S Laboratories (DRRD IN), and Aurobindo Pharma (ARBP IN) feature prominently in the court filings.

2. Dabur IN

Screenshot%202019 03 07%20at%208.53.59%20pm

This insight is jointly prepared by Nitin Mangal and Pranav Bhavsar.

Either Dabur India Ltd (DABUR IN) should change the crystal ball or those responsible for gazing at it. Going by its trajectory of strategies in the recent past, the narrative that emerges is that of confusion. Confusion has been a constant about whom Dabur perceived its competitors, its perception of the market while the disruptors reigned and what is and what should be its core strengths.

In this summary insight, we find Dabur heading to hibernation in summers. We believe this confused state of mind at Dabur will lead to lower than expected growth rates and an impact on margins. Our arguments are based on in-depth analysis of over 3 years of conference calls, past 5 year financial statements, competitors balance sheets and primary research covering different parts of the country. Our base case FY 21 EPS is 21% lower than consensus estimates and a potential aggressive case EPS is 26% lower than consensus. We argue for a 35x forward multiple giving us a target price of INR 322 for the base case and an aggressive case target price of INR 305 indicating a potential 26% & 30% downside from the latest close price of INR 437.

A Detailed Insight that includes our detailed arguments and financial forecasts can be found elsewhere here on Smartkarma using the company’s ticker.

3. Dabur IN

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This insight is jointly prepared by Nitin Mangal and Pranav Bhavsar.

Either Dabur India Ltd (DABUR IN) should change the crystal ball or those responsible for gazing at it. Going by its trajectory of strategies in the recent past, the narrative that emerges is that of confusion. Confusion has been a constant about whom Dabur perceived its competitors, its perception of the market while the disruptors reigned and what is and what should be its core strengths.

In this insight, we find Dabur heading to hibernation in summers. We believe this confused state of mind at Dabur will lead to lower than expected growth rates and an impact on margins. Our arguments are based on in-depth analysis of over 3 years of conference calls, past 5 year financial statements, competitors balance sheets and primary research covering different parts of the country. Our base case FY 21 EPS is 21% lower than consensus estimates and a potential aggressive case EPS is 26% lower than consensus. We argue for a 35x forward multiple giving us a target price of INR 322 for the base case and an aggressive case target price of INR 305 indicating a potential 26% & 30% downside from the latest close price of INR 437.

How the Insight is Structured 

The Insight begins with a background on Dabur’s Catch 22 Situation followed by a Brief Overviewof Dabur. We highlight the story so far and where we think is the disconnect. We discuss key takeaways from our field findings (primary research) and lay out our assumptions on how we think management will respond. We present where and how we differ from consensus and what does it mean for the stock price. We conclude the Insight by highlighting where we could be wrong along with key financials and an appendix about our primary research. 

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

Smartkarma supports the world’s leading investors with high-quality, timely, and actionable Insights. Subscribe now for unlimited access, or request a demo below.



Brief India: Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future
  2. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG
  3. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound
  4. What Next in the Inflation / Deflation Debate and What Does It Mean for Asset Prices?
  5. Monthly Geopolitical Comment: Markets Are Still Waiting for the Result of US-China Trade Talks

1. Battery Technology- The Key To An Electric Vehicle Future

Pic%2013

This Insight has been produced jointly by William Keating at Ingenuity and Mio Kato, CFA and Aqila Ali at LightStream Research.

The Insight is structured as follows:

  • A. Key  Conclusions
  • B. Report Highlights
  • C.History of Electric Vehicles
  • E. History of Rechargeable Battery Technologies And An In-Depth Analysis on Li-ion Batteries
  • F. Batteries Beyond Li-ion
  • G. Supply Constraints for Key Raw Materials
  • H. The Competitive Landscape

A. Key  Conclusions

Global sales of EV’s reached 2m units in 2018. As a base case scenario, we expect a combination of improving EV battery cost-effectiveness, increasingly challenging emissions standards and ongoing incentives by various governments to propel unit sales to 8m units annually by 2025. Against this, we consider battery material price increases, a reduction of EV incentives in the US and China and political and environmental risks from the mining of metals used in batteries as downside risks which could delay the growth of the EV market.

Surprisingly, the EV battery technology that will drive us towards that 8m unit goal is still very much a work in progress. While Lithium Ion is the by far the dominant technology, there are striking differences between variants of the technology, battery pack design, battery management systems and manufacturing scale between the leading contenders. Furthermore, while there’s nothing on the horizon to completely displace Lithium Ion within the next decade, it remains unclear whether the technology will be the one to achieve the $100/kWh price target that would make the EV cost-neutral compared to its internal combustion predecessors. 

Quite apart from the technology,  the EV battery segment faces other significant challenges including increasing costs for core materials such as Cobalt, increasing safety concerns as the mix of that very same cobalt is reduced in the cathode, the growing risk of litigation amidst a fiercely competitive environment and last but not least, the appetite of various governments to maintain a favourable subsidy framework. 

2. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG

Cscupdated

The JKM has halved its value since December, continuing its steady decline and dropping below the TTF, the benchmark for European LNG prices. Asian LNG spot prices are now at their lowest level since May 2015. While a prolonged LNG price downturn could force many projects to be cancelled, the winners among the developers are starting to emerge, aggressively pushing ahead their projects closer to the final investment decision.

Both Tellurian Inc (TELL US) and NextDecade Corp (NEXT US) signed high-profile deals, respectively with Total Sa (FP FP) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN), that could significantly de-risk their proposed LNG projects and increase the probability to reach FID in 2019. In Russia, LNG newcomer Novatek PJSC (NVTK LI) agreed two long-term offtake deals with Repsol SA (REP SM) and Vitol thereby moving a step closer to FID its Arctic LNG 2 project.

3. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound

India inflaton policyrate

We expect the RBI’s MPC to cut the policy (repo) rate by 25bp on 4th April, thereby unwinding the policy error it made last year by raising the repo rate by 50bp — on the basis of an utterly erroneous inflation forecast. (Our view was: RBI Raises Rates, but Will Likely Look Foolish when Inflation Moderates). Between November 2018 and January 2019, India’s real policy rate was consequently well above +4%. Even after tomorrow’s rate cut, India’s real interest rate will be among the highest in the world — and so the appropriate cut on 4th April would have been 50bp. Real GDP has decelerated to 6.6% and is set to decelerate further in the Jan-Mar19 quarter, and the decline in imports over the past 3 months provides additional evidence for the slowdown. 

However, India’s external sector is likely to lead the recovery over the next few quarters. FDI inflows averaged US$33.63bn annually in the first 4 years of NDA2 (the Modi administration), up from US$18.19bn in the previous 4 years. In April-December 2018, FDI inflows have risen to US$44.7bn. Meanwhile, the current account deficit was 2.4% of GDP in 2018 (calendar year), the largest during the Modi years, but is likely to shrink to 1% of GDP in January-March 2019. (During UPA2, the current account deficit was consistently above 2.6% of GDP, peaking at above 5% of GDP in 2012). The improved basic balance will lay the basis for a modestly stronger rupee that allows the RBI to pursue more aggressive monetary easing over the next few meetings. 

India’s exports grew 12.7% in 2017, 10% in 2018 and are up 3.1% YoY in Jan-Feb 2019. The latter seems unremarkable, except for the fact that Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore are all seeing their exports decline at a double-digit YoY pace over the past 4 months (and China’s exports are down 5.3% YoY in the latest 3 months) amid a renewed slump in global trade. In fact, India’s goods exports have grown faster than China’s for the past 3 years. In the last 3 months, India’s electronics exports (albeit only 3.3% of total goods exports) were up more than 50% YoY (amid a cyclical decline in global electronics demand!). Something big is beginning to stir in India, and it is not just the momentum in the election rallies!  

4. What Next in the Inflation / Deflation Debate and What Does It Mean for Asset Prices?

Despite some signs of stabilization in China’s factory gauges the primary trend is still weakness and it might be rash for investors to read too much into the recent data given the apparent weakness in the Eurozone and the moderation form a high level of growth in the United States.  Quantitative tightening is on hold in the United States but a sharp “U-turn” to easing has not happened yet and is politically embarrassing. As inflation falls real rates are rising. Housing markets are showing signs of price weakness. Investors need to watch for signs of credit quality decay that could be an indicator of the next period of severe financial distress. 

5. Monthly Geopolitical Comment: Markets Are Still Waiting for the Result of US-China Trade Talks

The future of the US and China relationship remains the most significant geopolitical and economic issue watched by the markets. While the markets prefer to focus on the positives, the eventual outcome of the talks may yet prove disappointing. Meanwhile, a rift is emerging among EU members who have diverging attitudes to cooperation with China. Authorities in Turkey have again spooked investors with their ham-fisted approach to markets. In Ukraine, comedian Zelensky has won in the first round of the presidential poll. In India, sabre-rattling continues ahead of parliamentary elections despite the de-escalation of tensions with neighbouring Pakistan.

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Brief India: Dabur IN and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. Dabur IN
  2. Dabur IN

1. Dabur IN

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This insight is jointly prepared by Nitin Mangal and Pranav Bhavsar.

Either Dabur India Ltd (DABUR IN) should change the crystal ball or those responsible for gazing at it. Going by its trajectory of strategies in the recent past, the narrative that emerges is that of confusion. Confusion has been a constant about whom Dabur perceived its competitors, its perception of the market while the disruptors reigned and what is and what should be its core strengths.

In this summary insight, we find Dabur heading to hibernation in summers. We believe this confused state of mind at Dabur will lead to lower than expected growth rates and an impact on margins. Our arguments are based on in-depth analysis of over 3 years of conference calls, past 5 year financial statements, competitors balance sheets and primary research covering different parts of the country. Our base case FY 21 EPS is 21% lower than consensus estimates and a potential aggressive case EPS is 26% lower than consensus. We argue for a 35x forward multiple giving us a target price of INR 322 for the base case and an aggressive case target price of INR 305 indicating a potential 26% & 30% downside from the latest close price of INR 437.

A Detailed Insight that includes our detailed arguments and financial forecasts can be found elsewhere here on Smartkarma using the company’s ticker.

2. Dabur IN

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This insight is jointly prepared by Nitin Mangal and Pranav Bhavsar.

Either Dabur India Ltd (DABUR IN) should change the crystal ball or those responsible for gazing at it. Going by its trajectory of strategies in the recent past, the narrative that emerges is that of confusion. Confusion has been a constant about whom Dabur perceived its competitors, its perception of the market while the disruptors reigned and what is and what should be its core strengths.

In this insight, we find Dabur heading to hibernation in summers. We believe this confused state of mind at Dabur will lead to lower than expected growth rates and an impact on margins. Our arguments are based on in-depth analysis of over 3 years of conference calls, past 5 year financial statements, competitors balance sheets and primary research covering different parts of the country. Our base case FY 21 EPS is 21% lower than consensus estimates and a potential aggressive case EPS is 26% lower than consensus. We argue for a 35x forward multiple giving us a target price of INR 322 for the base case and an aggressive case target price of INR 305 indicating a potential 26% & 30% downside from the latest close price of INR 437.

How the Insight is Structured 

The Insight begins with a background on Dabur’s Catch 22 Situation followed by a Brief Overviewof Dabur. We highlight the story so far and where we think is the disconnect. We discuss key takeaways from our field findings (primary research) and lay out our assumptions on how we think management will respond. We present where and how we differ from consensus and what does it mean for the stock price. We conclude the Insight by highlighting where we could be wrong along with key financials and an appendix about our primary research. 

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Brief India: More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG and more

By | India

In this briefing:

  1. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG
  2. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound
  3. What Next in the Inflation / Deflation Debate and What Does It Mean for Asset Prices?
  4. Monthly Geopolitical Comment: Markets Are Still Waiting for the Result of US-China Trade Talks
  5. Polycab India Limited IPO – Probably Near Peak Margins, Improvements Unexplained

1. More Volatility in the LNG Markets as JKM Drops Below TTF – Oil Majors Increase Exposure to US LNG

Exhibit1

The JKM has halved its value since December, continuing its steady decline and dropping below the TTF, the benchmark for European LNG prices. Asian LNG spot prices are now at their lowest level since May 2015. While a prolonged LNG price downturn could force many projects to be cancelled, the winners among the developers are starting to emerge, aggressively pushing ahead their projects closer to the final investment decision.

Both Tellurian Inc (TELL US) and NextDecade Corp (NEXT US) signed high-profile deals, respectively with Total Sa (FP FP) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSA LN), that could significantly de-risk their proposed LNG projects and increase the probability to reach FID in 2019. In Russia, LNG newcomer Novatek PJSC (NVTK LI) agreed two long-term offtake deals with Repsol SA (REP SM) and Vitol thereby moving a step closer to FID its Arctic LNG 2 project.

2. RBI to Unwind Its Policy Error, but Not Fast Enough; External Sector to Lead Rebound

India exim tradebalance

We expect the RBI’s MPC to cut the policy (repo) rate by 25bp on 4th April, thereby unwinding the policy error it made last year by raising the repo rate by 50bp — on the basis of an utterly erroneous inflation forecast. (Our view was: RBI Raises Rates, but Will Likely Look Foolish when Inflation Moderates). Between November 2018 and January 2019, India’s real policy rate was consequently well above +4%. Even after tomorrow’s rate cut, India’s real interest rate will be among the highest in the world — and so the appropriate cut on 4th April would have been 50bp. Real GDP has decelerated to 6.6% and is set to decelerate further in the Jan-Mar19 quarter, and the decline in imports over the past 3 months provides additional evidence for the slowdown. 

However, India’s external sector is likely to lead the recovery over the next few quarters. FDI inflows averaged US$33.63bn annually in the first 4 years of NDA2 (the Modi administration), up from US$18.19bn in the previous 4 years. In April-December 2018, FDI inflows have risen to US$44.7bn. Meanwhile, the current account deficit was 2.4% of GDP in 2018 (calendar year), the largest during the Modi years, but is likely to shrink to 1% of GDP in January-March 2019. (During UPA2, the current account deficit was consistently above 2.6% of GDP, peaking at above 5% of GDP in 2012). The improved basic balance will lay the basis for a modestly stronger rupee that allows the RBI to pursue more aggressive monetary easing over the next few meetings. 

India’s exports grew 12.7% in 2017, 10% in 2018 and are up 3.1% YoY in Jan-Feb 2019. The latter seems unremarkable, except for the fact that Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore are all seeing their exports decline at a double-digit YoY pace over the past 4 months (and China’s exports are down 5.3% YoY in the latest 3 months) amid a renewed slump in global trade. In fact, India’s goods exports have grown faster than China’s for the past 3 years. In the last 3 months, India’s electronics exports (albeit only 3.3% of total goods exports) were up more than 50% YoY (amid a cyclical decline in global electronics demand!). Something big is beginning to stir in India, and it is not just the momentum in the election rallies!  

3. What Next in the Inflation / Deflation Debate and What Does It Mean for Asset Prices?

Despite some signs of stabilization in China’s factory gauges the primary trend is still weakness and it might be rash for investors to read too much into the recent data given the apparent weakness in the Eurozone and the moderation form a high level of growth in the United States.  Quantitative tightening is on hold in the United States but a sharp “U-turn” to easing has not happened yet and is politically embarrassing. As inflation falls real rates are rising. Housing markets are showing signs of price weakness. Investors need to watch for signs of credit quality decay that could be an indicator of the next period of severe financial distress. 

4. Monthly Geopolitical Comment: Markets Are Still Waiting for the Result of US-China Trade Talks

The future of the US and China relationship remains the most significant geopolitical and economic issue watched by the markets. While the markets prefer to focus on the positives, the eventual outcome of the talks may yet prove disappointing. Meanwhile, a rift is emerging among EU members who have diverging attitudes to cooperation with China. Authorities in Turkey have again spooked investors with their ham-fisted approach to markets. In Ukraine, comedian Zelensky has won in the first round of the presidential poll. In India, sabre-rattling continues ahead of parliamentary elections despite the de-escalation of tensions with neighbouring Pakistan.

5. Polycab India Limited IPO – Probably Near Peak Margins, Improvements Unexplained

Peer%20comparison

Polycab India (POLY IN) plans to raise around US$190m in its IPO through a mix of selling primary and secondary shares. It is the largest manufacturer of wires and cables in India with a 12% market share, as per CRISIL research. The company also recently entered the consumer electrical segments. 

I covered the company background and past financial performance in my previous insight, Polycab India Limited Pre-IPO – Market Leader with Steady Growth but with a Few Unanswered Question.

In this insight, I’ll run the deal through our IPO framework, and comment on valuation and updates since the previous filing.

Get Straight to the Source on Smartkarma

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