Solid results season may not be good enough for India stocks
“After beginning on a strong note, the season lost its sheen toward the end,”

An otherwise strong earnings season for India’s companies is proving just not good enough for some, after a surprise loss by the country’s biggest bank renewed worries over credit quality.
State Bank of India’s December-quarter results spurred Motilal Oswal Securities Ltd. to pare its earnings per share estimate for NSE Nifty 50 Index firms by 3 per cent for the current fiscal and by 0.6 per cent for the financial year starting April 1.
“After beginning on a strong note, the season lost its sheen toward the end,” analysts led by Gautam Duggad wrote in a note. “The miss at profit after tax level can be entirely ascribed to public sector banks,” with the increase in provisions for bad debts and a drop in treasury income amid hardening bond yields dragging the bottom line, they said.
Sales at Nifty companies climbed an average 13 per cent and profits rose 7 per cent in the period from a year earlier, trailing the brokerage’s forecasts for both those metrics. Net income growth more than doubled to about 17 per cent after excluding SBI’s earnings, the analysts wrote. Tata Motors Ltd. and Oil & Natural Gas Corp. were also among heavyweights to announce sub-par results toward the end of the season, the brokerage said.

Still Expensive
Any deceleration in the earnings momentum will make it hard for the $2.3 trillion market to hold on to valuations that are among Asia’s most expensive even after the recent selloff. The Nifty trades at 21 times one-year forward earnings, compared with the five-year mean of 17.
“The high valuations of the Indian market will require the support of both earnings and macro given tightening monetary conditions globally,” Kotak Institutional Equities analysts led by Sanjeev Prasad wrote in a note. Quality of earnings is important, too, the brokerage said, noting that 60 per cent of Nifty’s incremental fiscal 2019 profits will come from sectors such as state banks, metals and utilities, which “logically” should trade at low multiples.
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