Investment Shastra
november 2021 stock market outlook

November 2021 Stock Market Outlook

Review

For the year ending Oct’21, Nifty closed at ~17,672, up 52% from last year. In the last 3 years, Nifty is up 70%; ~19% CAGR.

The last 1 year saw a massive shift in stock performance versus the prior 2 years where only Nifty stayed flat while the rest of the market saw correction. In the last 1 year, every segment of the market, small, mid, value, cyclical did better than Nifty.

Low-interest rates globally and high investor participation in the global market have led to good gains in stocks.

indian indices 1 year returns

Performance of Auto, Consumer Durables and Banking stocks was very good in the previous month.

Here is the list of best-performing stocks, Year-to-date:

Accelerated economic recovery across the sectors is exciting the market. Also, MF monthly inflows and SIP registrations have touched all-time highs in the previous month leading to stellar gains offlate.

core 50 superstars

Outlook

Nifty 50 index trades ~30% above its fair value while there are pockets of extreme overvaluation and undervaluation. Nifty – led by a concentrated portfolio of Top 10 stocks – is around 35% higher than its fair price, while the same is not true for all stocks. (Nifty@MRP 13,129 Jun’21). The next update will be done after we incorporate the December Quarter results.

We are seeing a recovery in growth in the coming year so we may see an upward revision in our estimates. This can bring down overvaluation down by ~5-10%.

As of date, the average upside of our coverage universe is likely to be closer to 10% CAGR over the next 5 years basis based on a current estimate. Similar to Nifty, the average upside of our universe is low due to few stocks showing < 0% CAGR while the rest showing > 15% CAGR upside potential.

Today, we are looking at opportunities in banking, infrastructure, building materials, export-oriented capital goods, PSUs, and import substitute ideas. We continue to remain positive on existing companies that are delivering good growth. We are benefiting from early investments in building materials, industrials. Optimistic outlook on real estate and increase in order flows has led to a rally in infra and infra-related stocks. We have added stocks in the industrials segment as we expect balance sheet strength to improve and cash flow growth will be better than past.

Stocks in IT and Pharma have moved up ahead of their earnings growth, we are reducing our allocation in the same. The same is true with few private companies in the power sector.

We look at companies that have good earning triggers over the next 2 years. We are investing in companies i) coming out of sector consolidation/debt reduction, or ii) introducing new products, or iii) commissioning new capacities, or iv) executing orders in hand. v) Export-oriented companies as economic recovery is better in western countries. This gives certainty of growth rather than plain anticipation.

We are incrementally adding to banks. Banks are key beneficiaries of credit cycle pick-up. As industrial activity improves, the working capital loans will be drawn from banks which will to credit growth. Retail loan growth has already picked in form of housing loans and discretionary purchases during the festive season.

We had a cautious stance on banks as we expected slippages in unsecured and SME loans. But as economic recovery happened faster thanks to vaccination, we are seeing stability in retail and corporate balance sheets. Large banks (AUM > 1,00,000 Cr) have made sufficient provisions as well as raised money to maintain a healthy capital adequacy ratio. With a fear of NPA behind, they will start lending in areas that are growing well. SBI’s MD recently confirmed the companies in Infra, PSU, chemicals, textiles are seeing good traction in asset growth backed by order book and demand both domestic and overseas.

Caution

We recommend avoiding stocks/sectors that have run up much ahead of their earnings growth over the last 3-4 years. We observe many small and mid-cap stocks have run ahead of valuation as non-institutional participation has led to excesses in few pockets. We reduced allocation to few mid and small caps where prices have run up ahead of earnings growth.

We recommend treading cautiously in small caps where sales figures are below 2019 levels but may optically look at high growth today on a low base of 2020. We recommend using FY19-20 sales as a base while evaluating growth or valuation. (Compute P/E ratio using EPS of 2019/20, Compute P/S ratio using Sales of 2019/20). We use 1-year forward Sales and EPS figures as we estimate the future growth of companies.

We have shifted focus to Core stocks (Large Cap, market leaders) that have strong future prospects which will provide better downside protection. However, one has to keep return expectations moderate as valuations are no longer cheap but in the fair value zone.

Platform Businesses & Fintech IPO Frenzy

We are seeing a lot of excitement around the IPOs of new-age internet businesses. Most of them are platform businesses with a brand recall, yet to make profits, and are listed at expensive valuations. We have written IPO notes on quite a few such public issues like Paytm, Nykaa, CarTrade.

The last decade of falling interest rates globally led to huge inflows into private equity. Private equity funds have been infusing funds into top 2-3 players irrespective of profitability and chasing higher and higher addressable markets. We have seen top 2-3 players in every industry becoming behemoth versus smaller peers. However, quite a few companies are yet to establish viable business models. We are cautious about such high valuations and have recommended subscribing only to investors with a high-risk appetite. We recommend investors to do compare the amount of risk involved here before making an investment decision. We prefer owning good businesses at attractive prices (preferably below fair value).

Risks

Indian Economy

While Q2FY22 corporate earnings were a mixed bag there were a few upgrades, especially in the Banking, IT, Metals & cement sectors. Autos & Pharma were major disappointments. Real estate continued to witness strong up move. Normalization of economic activities continued through the month of October.

Currently, we are seeing an acceleration in demand around the festive season from i) pent-up demand, ii) increase in salaries of IT employees, iii) lower interest rate or discount offers on real estate and eCommerce.

Near-term risks can come from rising inflation. India still imports the bulk of its crude oil requirement and gas. Any rise in price will have to be passed on to the consumer. Other commodities like natural gas or coal have also spiked due to shortage issues across several countries. If this persists we may see risk to equity valuation. Corporates are highlighting the risks in cost structure as gross margins are getting squeezed. Companies are not taking price hikes in hurry as it may impact volume growth.

However, if we keep aside the current valuation, we are optimistic about the Indian economy over the next 5 years. Even if we purchase shares at slightly higher prices, there is a good chance of earning healthy returns over the next 5 years. The Indian corporate sector is in the best position to gain pricing power and balance sheet strength. The majority of the sectors have seen consolidation. We are seeing this across sectors: Power, Telecom, Cement, Banks, NBFCs, Real Estate, building materials, Paper, pharma, capital goods, consumer durables, etc. This will give strong profitability for incumbents due to the high barrier to entry for the next few years.

Global Economy

There are signs of speculation in US primary and secondary markets and Cryptocurrencies. A lot of trading activity has led to an increase in leverage and higher trading volume. This is a risk to the market if not the economy. It may happen that the market comes off as the economy recovers as the benefit from fiscal stimulus will fade off. 

US interest rates are rising as investors start factoring in economic recovery and rise in short-term interest rates by central banks. This can lead to correction or time-wise correction over the next few quarters. While such corrections with a backdrop of economic recovery are welcome as we get to buy stocks at lower prices. We despise corrections due to fear of recession but such interim correction with an improving economy is a good hunting ground for opportunities. That’s why they say, corrections are healthy. 

*There is always some risk but every risk doesn’t materialize. It is important to keep an eye on risks but it may not require an action every time.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Aggressive Investor: “Few stocks are making big moves why are we investing cautiously or selectively?”

Our process of fundamental analysis, and valuation-driven long-term investment management has served us well across market cycles. We do not move in and out sectors chasing price momentum nor do we believe that no price is too high for good merchandise. We have seen many cycles to believe that many of these tricks have good and bad years. We will also have our hits and misses but on aggregate, we try to deliver more consistent and higher returns versus other investment options.

For long-term success we prefer caution over aggression, balanced versus bold, sustainable growth versus temporary.

“A principle is not a principle until it costs you something.” – William “Bill” Bernbach

On similar lines, “A process is not a process until it costs you something (or pinches you).”

Conservative Investor: “What if we are at the fag end of the bull market, time to sell?”

We have seen many recessions in past and saw stock market recoveries over a 2-3 year period. In the current scenario, we are past the recessionary period already, so any interim correction will be transitionary and may see a faster recovery versus the past.

Let’s take the worst period with the benefit of hindsight when Nifty peaked in Dec’07 and 3 years after that.

bse group a returns dec 7 to dec 10

If we observe individual stocks, we can see that markets made high in Dec’07, went through correction of 50%, and recovered in Dec’10. During this period Nifty was flat but more than 40% of stocks earned positive returns. Out of 185 large and mid-cap stocks (BSE Group A), 78 were positive, and more than half earned >13% CAGR. Together these 78 stocks earned >17% CAGR.

Now, this was the worst-case scenario where the market had a stellar bull run in 4 years preceding 2007. Companies had added a lot of debt for expansion and valuations were expensive.

Today, we are past recession i.e. back to back GDP de-growth and most companies are in much better shape than in Dec’07 at low utilization, low debt, and upward trajectory in volume growth.

The above table shows that, if we can pick stocks carefully by avoiding ones that have run ahead of their growth and inferior quality, we increase our odds of making very good returns in a 3/5 year period.

If we do get interim correction, we can earn more as we get to add to stocks at cheaper valuations. On your own, you can set up an additional SIP during interim correction to improve returns. Odds are highly in favor of staying invested rather than exiting or delaying fresh addition as we can’t predict the right time to invest expect in hindsight.

If we look at past data, there was an 85% chance of beating FD return on 5 year period. If your time horizon is long-term (5 years+), the current valuation will matter less and near-term events become irrelevant. We do not find any merit in second-guessing what’s going to happen in the next 6 months-1 year.

bse sensex annual returns from 1981-2020

nifty 50 5 year rolling returns

This is the reason we recommend not to disturb the equity portion in your asset allocation. Changing your asset allocation will reduce long-term returns or missing out on the target corpus.

If you have decided to stay with 60% Equity and 40% debt, you can rebalance but do not deviate much from 60% in Equity. Use our Financial Planning tool to find your target corpus and required asset allocation/monthly saving.

We have diversified our stocks portfolio, we have diversified assets and we have a long-term horizon. Together this takes care of all potential risks in investing.

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Rushikesh Bhise

Rushikesh Bhise, a CFA level 3 Candidate with 1.5 years of experience in Equity Research. A Post Graduate in Commerce from Pune & a CA-Inter, he is a finance enthusiast and has worked in the Investment Banking domain. He has a keen interest in analyzing the business of the companies and enjoys reading finance literature. His hobbies include reading books, playing Piano and practicing Martial Art.

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