Ambit Capital sees accounting stress for electronic manufacturers

Ambit Capital sees accounting stress for electronic manufacturers


Global brokerage CLSA has flagged rising risks for the EMS sector amid surging memory chip prices
| Photo Credit:
Bloomberg

Electronics manufacturing services (EMS) sector is showing signs of deteriorating accounting quality and weak cash generation despite strong reported earnings growth, according to a report by Ambit Capital. The study found a widening disconnect between profitability and cash flows, with rising working capital needs and aggressive capital expenditure leading to negative cumulative free cash flows across most companies, raising concerns about the sustainability of expansion.

Nuvama Institutional Equities recently noted that the majority of EMS firms posted improved margins y-o-y in Q3FY26. The sectoral revenue, EBITDA and PAT grew 13 per cent, 31 per cent and 39 per cent, respectively, it added.

Global brokerage CLSA has flagged rising risks for the EMS sector amid surging memory chip prices. It said the global memory industry is entering an early boom phase across DRAM, NAND and specialty memory, driven by AI-led demand and constrained supply growth from manufacturers.

Cash crunch

Ambit Capital report highlighted that accounting quality across EMS companies has weakened in recent years as cash conversion deteriorated and working capital cycles lengthened.

While revenue growth has been buoyed by structural manufacturing tailwinds and supply-chain diversification, increased inventory, receivables, and capital deployment have constrained operational liquidity. The findings suggested that the sector’s headline growth masks underlying pressure on cash generation, making capital efficiency and accounting discipline key variables for investors assessing long-term resilience.

Some of the key players in the segment are Dixon Technologies, Amber Enterprises, Kaynes Technologies, PG Electroplast. Avalon Technologies and Syrma SGS.

Among individual companies, Kaynes Technology drew the highest scrutiny on earnings quality, according to Ambit Capital. The report noted negative pre-tax operating cash flow relative to EBITDA and rising working capital intensity driven by higher receivable and inventory days.

‘Kaynes looks vulnerable’

Kaynes lags due to lower accounting score, low ID score (0), promoter presence in audit committee, auditor appointment practices, low audit fees and notable KMP churn, the report read.

While management initiatives such as bill discounting and supply chain financing are expected to improve collections, Ambit Capital stressed that cash conversion remains a key monitorable.

Ambit Capital viewed Amber Enterprises as the strongest performer on accounting metrics among EMS peers and the only firm within its zone of safety.

Avalon Technologies’ weaker cash conversion in recent years was primarily driven by higher working-capital investment linked to strong revenue growth and a rise in inventory days between FY20 and FY24. As per Ambit, this pressure is easing, with inventory days gradually declining and working-capital levels normalising.

For Dixon, Ambit flagged valuation concerns and risks tied to the expiry of mobile PLI incentives, emphasising thin margins, but high ROCE, driven by high asset turns and operating leverage. CLSA has downgraded Dixon from outperform to hold at a lower target price of 12,100.

Despite these concerns, the sector continues to benefit from strong demand visibility and manufacturing incentives. However, Ambit Capital cautioned that sustained expansion and ongoing working capital investments are likely to keep free cash flow generation subdued in the near term. Investors need to track accounting quality, governance standards and capital efficiency as key indicators of whether the sector’s rapid growth can be maintained on a durable financial footing.

Published on February 20, 2026



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JSW Infra to issue shares to meet minimum public stake norm

JSW Infra to issue shares to meet minimum public stake norm


JSW Infrastructure debuted on the bourses on October 3, 2023.
| Photo Credit:
DANISH SIDDIQUI

Ports operator JSW Infrastructure said it has approved raising equity capital by issuing up to 25 crore shares, setting the stage for a fresh fund infusion to back its aggressive expansion plans and to comply with regulatory norms for minimum public stake.

The company did not specify how much of funds it planned to raise but based on its closing market price on Friday, the share issuance is worth ₹6,325 crore.

The proposed issuance will help the company meet the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (SEBI) requirement to raise public shareholding to 25 per cent within three years of listing.

The port operator debuted on the bourses on October 3, 2023, and must align with the minimum public shareholding (MPS) norms within the stipulated timeline.

The fund-raise comes as the company is executing a ₹39,000-crore integrated capital expenditure programme aimed at scaling port capacity from 177 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) to 400 MTPA by FY2030.

The plan spans brownfield expansions, new connectivity projects and greenfield developments across Odisha, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Oman. In parallel, it is investing ₹9,000 crore to build an integrated ports-to-hinterland logistics ecosystem as part of the broader capex blueprint.

Despite the expansion push, the company had maintained a relatively conservative balance sheet, with net debt-to-EBITDA at 0.76 times and cash and bank balances of ₹3,455 crore as of December 31, 2025.

It holds investment-grade ratings from global agencies, underscoring financial resilience amid large-scale investments.

The company has guided operating EBITDA to double by FY28 from FY26 levels to around ₹5,000 crore, driven by project execution in the ports business and the transition of logistics assets from capex to revenue contribution.

The company said the equity raise would strengthen its growth trajectory while reinforcing governance standards and broadening market participation as it builds out a national maritime and logistics platform.

Published on February 20, 2026



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Livelihoods get a fresh start with reopening of tourist destination in J&K

Livelihoods get a fresh start with reopening of tourist destination in J&K


Earlier, 28 destinations were reopened in phases following a detailed security review.
| Photo Credit:
IMRAN NISSAR

Tourist guide and horseman Javed Ahmad Khari visited the snow-covered meadows of Yousmarg and welcomed the first visitor following the reopening of the destination after nearly 10 months.

Located about 47 km from Srinagar, Yousmarg was reopened on February 17 along with 13 other tourist spots by Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha. A total of 48 destinations had been closed to travellers after last year’s Pahalgam attack and the subsequent military action by India against Pakistan. Earlier, 28 destinations were reopened in phases following a detailed security review.

Stakeholders, including tour operators, ponywalas and guides, had consistently demanded reopening of the destinations. In August 2025, Khari even brought a horse to Raj Bhavan (now Lok Bhavan) to protest the prolonged closure.

“We suffered terribly due to closure of this site,” Khari told businessline, adding that they are relieved and hopeful after the reopening. He said tourists have begun arriving in Yousmarg and expects numbers to rise in the coming days.

Abdul Hameed, President of the Yousmarg Pony Owners Association, demanded compensation for pony operators. “Over the last several months, it was very difficult to feed the animals. The government must announce a relief package for us,” he added.

Amid heightened security arrangements at the neighbouring destination of Doodpathri, tourists have begun trickling in following the reopening announcement. 

Industry representatives said the reopening will boost local businesses and allow visitors to explore destinations beyond traditional hotspots. 

Qazi Tauseef, spokesperson of the Kashmir Economic Alliance, said the move will significantly boost confidence among tourists, travel operators, hoteliers, transporters and the wider business community.

“We hope iconic destinations like Gurez and Bangus Valley will soon reopen after snow clearance, further diversifying tourism circuits and promoting border and offbeat tourism,” he added.

Officials said the reopening follows a comprehensive security review and the implementation of necessary safety protocols to ensure the safe movement of visitors. Authorities have strengthened deployment and surveillance measures at key locations to reassure tourists and restore confidence in the Valley’s tourism sector.

Local shopkeepers and tea stall owners have also started resuming operations, expressing optimism that the return of visitors will revive livelihoods that remained disrupted for nearly a year.

Published on February 20, 2026



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Total corporate bond issuances declined 6% in 9MFY26 amid rising yields and shift towards bank credit: RBI Bulletin

Total corporate bond issuances declined 6% in 9MFY26 amid rising yields and shift towards bank credit: RBI Bulletin


Corporate bond issuances increased to ₹74,000 crore in December 2025 from ₹59,000 crore in November 2025, according to RBI’s ‘State of the Economy’ report

Total corporate bond issuances in the first nine months of the current financial year (9MFY26) are about 6 per cent lower at ₹6.83 lakh crore, against ₹7.25 lakh crore in the corresponding period of the previous year. This development comes amidst rising corporate bond yields and the shift towards bank credit.

Corporate bond issuances increased to ₹74,000 crore in December 2025 from ₹59,000 crore in November 2025, according to RBI’s ‘State of the Economy’ report.

Corporate bond yields hardened across tenors and the rating spectrum, with their spreads over corresponding maturity government securities generally widening.

For example, in the case of one-year and three-year “AAA”-rated corporate bonds, their spreads over corresponding maturity government securities widened to 181 basis points (bps) during the January 16, 2026 – February 16, 2026 period (from 151 bps during the December 16, 2025 – January 14, 2026 period) and 91 bps (80 bps), respectively.

Bank credit and deposit growth

Scheduled commercial banks’ (SCBs) credit and deposit growth continued to be in double digits during the month, with credit growth outpacing deposit growth, per the bulletin.

SCBs’ credit growth increased marginally to 14.6 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) as on January 31, 2026, from 14.5 per cent (y-o-y) as on December 31, 2025. SCBs’ deposit growth declined marginally to 12.5 per cent (y-o-y) from 12.7 per cent (y-o-y) during the same period last year.

Overall, non-food bank credit growth (y-o-y) witnessed strengthening across all major sectors in December, 2025.

Agriculture and industrial credit growth surged to double digits. Within industries, lending to micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) as well as large industries witnessed higher growth. Credit to services sector grew, due to a steep rise in bank lending to NBFCs, along with robust growth in sectors like trade and commercial real estate. Housing, gold and vehicle loan segments drove growth of personal loans.

Flow of financial resources

So far in FY26 (up to January 31, 2026), total flow of financial resources to the commercial sector increased to ₹34.5 lakh crore from ₹25.5 lakh crore a year ago. Non-bank sources − corporate bond issuances, and foreign direct investment to India − has shown a marked increase so far.

As on January 31, 2026, the total outstanding credit to the commercial sector rose by 14.7 per cent, with non-bank sources registering a growth of 15.1 per cent.

Published on February 20, 2026



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Weekly Stock Market Wrap: Top Gainers & Losers explained

Weekly Stock Market Wrap: Top Gainers & Losers explained


The week saw significant moves within the benchmark Nifty 50, with engineering, FMCG and a few financial heavyweights lending support on the upside even as information technology and select auto counters dragged.

Top gainers of Nifty 50: L&T, ITC, Bajaj Finance

Larsen & Toubro

Larsen & Toubro shares surged nearly 6 per cent to a high of ₹4,379 recorded today on the National Stock Exchange of India from the low of ₹4,134.10 recorded on February 13, 2026.

The upmove was supported by continued optimism around order inflows and infrastructure spending visibility. The company recently teamed up with Nvidia to build the country’s largest gigawatt-scale AI factory.

ITC

ITC shares swigged 7 per cent to a high of ₹334.25 this week from a low of ₹313.15 recorded on February 16, 2026.

Bajaj Finance

Bajaj Finance soared 4 per cent to a high of ₹1,036.60 today from the low of ₹992.80 recorded on February 13, 2026. The gain tracked positive momentum across financial stocks as expectations around credit growth and a stable asset quality outlook underpinned investor confidence in lending-focused firms.

Top losers: Eternal, M&M, Infosys, Tech Mahindra, Kwality Wall’s

From technology majors to auto and consumer-linked counters, declines ranged from moderate to sharp, reflecting profit booking and sentiment-driven moves across segments.

Eternal

Shares of Eternal tumbled 10.6 per cent to a low of ₹268 on February 20, 2026, from the high of ₹300 recorded on February 13, 2026. Market participants attributed the slide largely to profit booking following the stock’s recent rally.

Infosys & Tech Mahindra weakens amid IT sector pressure

IT heavyweight Infosys shed 6 per cent to a low of ₹1,338.20 today from the high of ₹1,431 recorded on February 17, 2026. The fall came in line with sector-wide declines amid AI fears, with sentiment dampened by concerns over slowing deal momentum in key overseas markets and valuation adjustments after recent gains.

Tech Mahindra depreciated 6 per cent to ₹1,454.10 today from ₹1,548 recorded on February 13, 2026. The stock mirrored softness across information technology counters as investors reassessed global demand outlook and sectoral headwinds.

In addition, shares of Wipro, TCS and HCL Tech also staged significant volatility this week.

Mahindra & Mahindra

Mahindra & Mahindra shares fell 5 per cent to a low of ₹3,402.50 from the previous high of ₹3,596.50 posted on February 13, 2026. Analysts pointed to routine consolidation after a strong run-up, along with mixed cues in the auto segment.

Kwality Wall’s tumbles after listing

Recently listed Kwality Wall’s declined nearly 15 per cent this week to a low of ₹26.56 recorded on February 18, 2026, from the high of ₹31.29 recorded on its listing day.

The drop reflected post-listing volatility typical of newly traded counters, with selling pressure emerging as early investors booked profits. The movement was earlier reported by businessline.

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Published on February 20, 2026



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As Russian crude flows to India dwindle, Saudi Arabian shipments likely to hit 6-year high

As Russian crude flows to India dwindle, Saudi Arabian shipments likely to hit 6-year high


As Indian imports of Russian crude oil narrow due to US and EU sanctions, shipments of the geopolitically-sensitive commodity from Saudi Arabia are expected at around one million barrels per day (mb/d) in February 2026, highest in more than six years.

New Delhi has turned towards its traditional suppliers in West Asia, particularly Saudi Arabia, Iraq and the UAE, to replace lost Russian barrels. Another beneficiary is the US.

To top it up, Saudi Aramco slashing Arab Light’s official selling price to Asia by $0.30 a barrel for March, on par with the Oman/Dubai benchmark, reflects Riyadh’s efforts to address completion amidst rising global supply.

Global real time data and analytics provider Kpler anticipates that Russian oil crude imports into India are estimated at around 1–1.2 million barrels per day (mb/d) in February 2026, easing towards roughly 800-1,000 thousand b/d (kb/d) in March.

“However, we continue to see this as a short-term stabilisation rather than a return to the mid-2025 peak, and we expect Russia’s share in India’s crude slate to gradually stabilise to a lower range in 2026 compared to 2024/2025 as commercial and policy frictions build,” it added.

Russia emerged as India’s main crude oil supplier in the last few years with Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the UAE filling the next three spots. Recently, Washington displaced Abu Dhabi to take the fourth spot.

With the US sanctions on Russian oil giants, Rosneft and Lukoil, coming into effect in November 2025 and the EU’s 19th sanctions package becoming effective last month, India’s crude oil imports dynamics is undergoing another transition.

Sumit Ritolia, Kpler’s Lead Research Analyst for Refining & Modeling told businessline “Saudi Arabia has already regained its position as India’s top supplier in February month-to-date data. As of February 19, Saudi volumes are tracking around 1.4 mb/d, marking the highest level since November 2019.”

However, Kpler expects some moderation in the coming weeks, with a few parcels likely slipping into early March, he added.

“On a full-month basis, our predictive flows model currently indicates Saudi imports averaging closer to around 1-1.1 mb/d in February, still a multi-year high,” Ritolia emphasised.

The immediate replacement for softer Russian flows has largely come from the Middle East, particularly Saudi Arabia, he pointed out.

Recent OSP adjustments for Asia have improved the competitiveness of Saudi barrels, Iraq and the UAE, encouraging additional buying for March-loading cargoes, Ritolia explained.

“We also expect Russian imports to dip further in April, as Nayara’s Vadinar refinery is scheduled for maintenance in April–May (2026). Overall, we see Russian flows gradually declining in the medium term, rather than stopping entirely,” he added.

“In summary, while Saudi Arabia is currently positioned as India’s largest supplier in February (till date), followed by Russia and Iraq and as the month closes, we expect some moderation in volumes from Saudi Arabia and overall Volumes from Iraq and Saudi Arabia to be similar around 1-1.1 mb/d,” the Kpler analyst projected.

Signs of a “more pragmatic understanding” appears to be developing between New Delhi and Washington, which effectively allows India to continue importing “baseload” volumes from Moscow, he said.

“The implied tolerance level appears to be around 800–1,000 kb/d, with near-term volatility driven by sanctions risk, shipping constraints and logistics, Ritolia said.

The expectation seems to be that India can maintain volumes needed to support refinery operations and domestic fuel supply, but should avoid materially increasing purchases beyond that baseline.

Published on February 20, 2026



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