Arun Kejriwal | 04 Feb, 2024
The week gone by was super eventful, volatile and action packed. We
had the last of the Union budgets by the present government being
presented. Even though it was just a vote-on-account, there was
expectation which got built up into the same.
This was partly on
account of media hype and the opposition wishing and wanting to counter
the government if they made announcements which went against the spirit
of this being just an appropriation bill. Thankfully none of this
happened and the budget saw markets move up even sharply on the
following day.
For the week, markets were up on three of the five
sessions and lost on two. BSE SENSEX gained 1,384.96 points or 1.96% to
close at 72,085.63 points while NIFTY gained 501.20 points or 2.35% to
close at 21,853.80 points. The broader indices saw BSE100, BSE200 and
BSE500 gain 2.36%, 2.50% and 2.62% respectively. BSEMIDCAP gained 3.13%
while BSESMALLCAP was up 3.35%.
The Indian Rupee gained 20 paisa
or 0.24% to close at Rs 82.92 to the US Dollar. Dow Jones had a great
week and gained on four of the five trading sessions.
This was
even though the FED kept rates unchanged at its meeting during the week.
It now appears any rate cut may happen in either two months’ time or
maybe four months. This did not affect the markets and they continued to
rally strongly.
RBI would be meeting for its bi-monthly policy
review meeting between February 6 and 8. It is widely expected that repo
rates would remain unchanged. The current repo rates are at 6.5% and
they have remained at this level since February 2023.
RBI took
strict action against Paytm payments bank and debarred Paytm from
allowing fresh transactions and credits into the wallets which are
operated by Paytm payments bank because of serious compliance issues.
The
stock markets reacted in the manner that they know best and the share
lost 20% each for the last two days. The share price of Paytm stands at
Rs 487.05, a loss of Rs 273.95 or 35.99% from Rs 761 on Wednesday.
While
the business of Paytm and its use as a payment facilitator is not
impacted, it needs to shift balances and appoint new payments bank at
the earliest within the current month of February.
In what could
at best be described as a major coincidence, the Jio Payments bank,
which had been granted a licence in April 2018, is all over social
media. I believe as investors realise the ground reality, the share
Paytm should begin to consolidate in the coming week.
The budget
was announced on Thursday and markets were fairly quiet on a net basis
on that day. They lost marginally and were down about 0.15%. The event
saw a couple of important events from the market perspective. There was a
very strong message and body language that was visible from the FM’s
speech when she said that the government would present the full budget
in July 2024.
The temptation to splurge some money on populist
measures ahead of the general elections was done away with. On the other
hand, the budget has remained within the confines of the fiscal path
and actually cut some of the capital expenditure.
Indian bonds
would list later on during the calendar year in international markets
and to ensure that they get fair valuation, the budget targets and
fiscal prudence are being exercised for a fourth year in a row.
Increased
expenditure on infrastructure projects, railway development and
announcement of new freight corridors were highlights of the budget.
The
budget led to euphoria in the markets the next day and intraday the BSE
SENSEX was up about 1,450 points while NIFTY was up 425 points. Markets
ended with gains of 440 points on BSE SENSEX and 150 points on NIFTY.
In
the process, NIFTY made a new lifetime high at 22,126.80 points beating
the previous high made on January 16 by a whisker. The difference was a
mere 2.65 points. However, BSE SENSEX was unable to make the new high
and fell quite short of it, almost 340 points.
The week ahead is yet another bumper IPO week with as many as four mainboard IPOs opening and closing during the week.
These
IPOs are from those companies for whom listing before February 15 is
important as they have bonds listed on the exchanges and need to declare
quarterly results and also those who were waiting for the budget and
hoping that it would not dampen sentiments.
The first IPO is from
Apeejay Surrendra Park Hotels Limited, which is tapping the capital
markets with its fresh issue of Rs 600 crore and an offer for sale of Rs
320 crore. The price band is Rs 147-155.
The issue opens on
Monday (February 5) and closes on Wednesday (February 7). The retail
portion is 10% of the issue as the company had not reported profits in
the financial years 2021 and 2022.
The company has 2,123 keys in
27 hotels through a combination of ownership, leased and managed
properties. It reported revenues of Rs 524.43 crores for the year ended
March 2023 and a profit of Rs 48.06 crores after tax. The average
occupancy for the hotel is a very healthy 91.77%.
The company
reported an EPS of Rs 2.75 for the year ended March 2023. The PE
multiple for the company is 53.45-56.36 which is comparable with its
peer set such as Chalet Hotels, Lemon Tree and Samhi Hotels. The issue
merits subscription.
The second issue is from Rashi Peripherals
Limited which is into the national distribution of global technology
brands for information and communication technology products. The
company is tapping the markets with its fresh issue of Rs 600 crores in a
price band of Rs 295-311. The issue would open on Wednesday (February
7), and close on Friday (February 9).
The company reported
revenues of Rs 9,454.27 crores and a net profit of Rs 123.34 crores for
the year ended March 2023. The EPS for the company on a fully diluted
basis was Rs 29.50. The PE for the company is 10-10.54 times which
compares favourably with its listed peer, Redington India Limited.
Subscription to the issue is warranted.
The third issue to open
during the week is from Jana Small Finance Bank Limited which is tapping
the capital markets with its fresh issue of Rs 462 crores and an offer
for sale of 26,08,629 equity shares. The price band of the issue is Rs
393-414 and the issue would open on Wednesday (February 7), and close on
Friday (February 9).
The company reported a fully diluted EPS of
Rs 42.64 for the year ended March 23. Based on this EPS, the PE multiple
for the small finance bank is 9.22-9.71.
Post issue, the NAV of
the bank would be Rs 298.52. At this NAV, the price to book, a key ratio
for evaluating banks would be at 0.72 which makes the offering very
lucrative and would receive overwhelming support. The issue becomes one
where investors should try their luck and hope that their application is
successful in the lottery.
The fourth and final issue to open
this week on Wednesday (February 7) and close on Friday (February 9) is
from Capital Small Finance Bank Limited.
The company is raising Rs
450 crores in a fresh issue and consists of an offer for sale of
15,61,329 shares in a price band of Rs 445-468. The company is into
Agriculture, MSME and mortgage loans and is present in 5 states and one
union territory. Its presence is strongest in Punjab followed by
Haryana, Delhi and it has entered Rajasthan and Himachal Pradesh as
well. Chandigarh is the union territory it is present in.
The
company reported an EPS of Rs 27.21 on a fully diluted basis for the
year ended March 23. The PE for the company is 16.35-17.20. It is
expensive compared to another issue which is open at the same time from
Jana Small Finance Bank Limited. The NAV for the bank, post the issue,
is at 232.79.
The price to book for the bank at the above NAV
assuming the issue is priced at the top end would be 2.01. The issue is
reasonably priced looking at the opportunity. However, if we were to
look at subscribing to just one of the two banks on offer, the issue
from Jana is better priced and offers a higher return than Capital.
Coming
to the markets in the week ahead, one can clearly say that the risk
reward ratio is against the investor. The sharp volatility witnessed
particularly on Friday is a dangerous sign and does not augur well for
the markets.
The sharp gains in the PSU stocks particularly the
way railway stocks are behaving is another reason to feel discomfort. It
makes sense to take some money of the table and allow markets to cool
off. FPIs were big sellers in January 2024 and sold stock worth Rs
25,744 crores.
In short, it’s time to be cautious and with no news flow in the immediate future, cooling off is a must for markets.
While
the RBI meeting in the coming week is expected to keep rates steady and
the election results are a no-brainer, the pace at which markets are
rising need to taper. We cannot peak so soon with result day still four
months away.
Trade cautiously.
(Arun Kejriwal is the founder of Kejriwal Research and Investment Services. The views expressed are personal)