HomeNewsBusinessMarketsShort call: India Inc's earnings squeeze while valuations plays 'catch me if you can'; Zomato, Glenmark in focus

Short call: India Inc's earnings squeeze while valuations plays 'catch me if you can'; Zomato, Glenmark in focus

At all times, in all markets, in all parts of the world, the tiniest change in rates changes the value of every financial asset. - Warren Buffett

August 20, 2024 / 07:55 IST
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As global markets pivot back to expecting a Fed rate cut in the upcoming September meeting, the conversation has shifted to predicting just how deep those cuts might be in 2024.
As global markets pivot back to expecting a Fed rate cut in the upcoming September meeting, the conversation has shifted to predicting just how deep those cuts might be in 2024.

As we close the books on Q1 earnings, India Inc. might be in for a reality check. BSE500 companies (minus OMCs) have clocked in sub-10% PAT growth for the fifth straight quarter. And even with a helpful base, the numbers barely moved the needle.

The bigger worry? The narrowing scope for margin expansion for most companies. Analysts at Nuvama Institutional Equities articulate this beautifully. According to them, margins are likely to hit more bumps than boosts. Besides, with BFSI credit costs normalizing and input prices levelling out, there's little wiggle room for margin expansion. Companies are already operating at peak efficiency, so any meaningful profit growth now hinges on a serious top-line revival, they add.

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And just when you thought a consumption boost could ride in to save the day, it turns out that might not happen either. Private sector wage growth has slipped to 8% year-on-year, a 10-year low (excluding the COVID dip). With wage growth dragging down household incomes, corporate earnings might face some heat in the quarters ahead.

Add to this the high valuations of Indian equities, and you're looking at a market where prices might be running ahead of fundamentals. The non-institutional investors have been holding the fort, but the question is: how long can they keep it up?