Weak pricing offsets strong volume show of Indian agrochemical majors

Weak pricing offsets strong volume show of Indian agrochemical majors



Despite volume growth in the export segment and strong demand in the domestic market, a pricing uptick is eluding Indian agrochemical companies. Most agrochemical companies missed street estimates due to multiple headwinds. Brokerages have downgraded earnings estimates for a few and expect only a gradual recovery over the next couple of quarters.


Companies with a significant share of exports were impacted more than domestic companies. Despite healthy volume growth, pricing pressure and excessive dumping from China dented profitability, says IIFL Research, with export-oriented agrochemical companies like UPL, Anupam Rasayan, and Rallis continuing to witness a challenging quarter.


Ranjit Cirumalla and Viral M Shah of the brokerage have downgraded Kaveri Seeds and Bayer CropScience on account of a subdued performance and a not-so-encouraging outlook, coupled with the steep run-up in stock prices.


The situation, according to Kotak Institutional Equities, is unlikely to improve in the near term. Abhijit Akella and Sumit Kumar of the brokerage point out that falling global farm incomes on the back of significant declines in prices of key field crops seem likely to weigh on demand for agricultural inputs in the months to come.


Prices of corn, soybeans, and wheat are now at their lowest since Covid and are down 20-30 per cent Y-o-Y. The USDA projects that US net farm income will be down 25.5 per cent Y-o-Y in 2024 to $116 billion, down sharply from $185 billion in 2022. This will likely weigh on demand for farm inputs.


The situation was markedly better in India, which has enabled domestic agrochemical companies to report strong results in Q1. The sales growth was aided by robust volumes amid increased demand. Rohan Gupta and Rohan Ohri of Nuvama Research believe that the growth has been supported by above-average rainfall across the country, which has accelerated inventory liquidation and subsequently prompted restocking. They expect this growth momentum to sustain, led by better rainfall as well as sowing activities across the country, benefiting domestic agrochemical companies. Fertiliser companies, however, have been a drag on the overall performance of domestic companies due to lower realisation and higher input prices. The brokerage is optimistic about domestic companies, and its top pick is Dhanuka Agritech.


Sharekhan Research is also positive about the domestic outlook and points out that the performance of agri-input companies rose on a sequential basis. Demand for crop protection chemicals during the Kharif season was strong, with better sowing averages due to improved monsoon conditions. However, they expect the recovery process to be slow. While domestic market sentiment is positive due to favourable rainfall forecasts, normalisation of inventory and a full recovery in demand is expected to take several more quarters. Though there are short-term hiccups, Sharekhan Research is positive on the long-term structural drivers like the China Plus One strategy and import substitution, which remain intact and would drive the expansion of India’s global market share to 7-8 per cent in the next few years from 4 per cent currently. PI Industries, Insecticides (India), and Sumitomo Chemical are its top picks.

First Published: Aug 23 2024 | 12:43 AM IST



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PGIM India MF launches multicap fund; Axis MF floats consumption fund

PGIM India MF launches multicap fund; Axis MF floats consumption fund



PGIM India MF launches multicap fund


PGIM India Mutual Fund on Thursday launched its multicap fund, which will invest across larg­ecap, midcap,and smallcap stocks with a mini­mum allocation of 25 per cent in each of three market capitalisation segments. “The scheme also has a provision to take exposure in debt (up to 25 per cent) and up to 20 per cent in foreign securities,” the fund house said. BS reporter


Axis Mutual Fund floats consumption fund


Axis Mutual Fund on Thursday announced the launch of a consumption fund which will invest in firms across sectors like FMCG, consu­mer discr­etionary, retailing, auto, and realty. “The fund would provi­de investors with anexposure to industries poised to benefit from ongoing structural and cultural sh­i­fts in consumer beha­viour,” the fund house said.  BS reporter


Premier Energies’ Rs 2,830 cr IPO to open on Aug 27


Solar cell and module manufacturer Premier Energies on Thursday said it has fixed a price band of Rs 427-450 a share for its Rs 2,830 crore initial public offering (IPO). The initial share sale will open on August 27 and conclude on August 29 and the bidding for anchor investors will open for a day on August 26, the firm said. PTI


Dish TV fined by BSE, NSE for lacking board strength 


Direct-to-home operator Dish TV has been fined Rs 12.74 lakh by BSE and NSE for lack of quorum on its board, according to a regulatory filing by the company. Earlier also, Dish TV had received notices from the bourses on February 22, 2024, and August 21, 2023. PTI

First Published: Aug 22 2024 | 11:04 PM IST



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Sensex likely to surpass 117,000 by FY30-end on rapid growth: Analysis

Sensex likely to surpass 117,000 by FY30-end on rapid growth: Analysis



Stocks will rise at a compound annual growth rate of at least 7 per cent over the long-term to unpreced­ented levels as breakneck economic expansion boosts corporate earnings and margins. 

 


The Sensex may surge about 45 per cent past 117,000 by theend of the financial year 2030 while the Nifty will climb to 35,324 from around 24,700 now, an analysis based on historical correlations between aggregate economic output and market capitalisation (mcap) shows.

 

Mcap has surged to $5 trillion from $4.2 trillion at the end of last year compared to the economic output which is estimated to reach $3.8 trillion in 2024.

 


Output has traditionally had a high explanatory power (about 87 per cent) when the nation’s aggregate mcap is decomposed. The levels estimated for the Sensex and the Nifty assume that India’s economy will continue to be the fastest-growing among the major markets.

 


S&P Global forecasts that the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP) will double to $7.5 trillion by the end of 2030. In December last year, the rating firm estimated that India’s rapid growth — driven by its growing middle class, rising consumer spending, and digital transformation — would put GDP on track to exceed Japan by by 2030.             

That would make it the second-biggest economy in the Asia-Pacific region. Some of that optimism has been on display recently. Since the results of the national election is known, the Sensex has climbed some 12 per cent. 

First Published: Aug 22 2024 | 11:01 PM IST



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Binance Holdings to hire 1,000 people as compliance spending tops 0 mn

Binance Holdings to hire 1,000 people as compliance spending tops $200 mn


Binance plans to have a 700-strong compliance workforce by the end of 2024. | Source: Bloomberg

By Olga Kharif


Binance Holdings Ltd. is hiring 1,000 people this year with many earmarked for compliance roles as the crypto exchange’s annual spending to meet regulatory requirements, including US oversight under a plea deal, tops $200 million.

 

Chief Executive Officer Richard Teng, who is visiting the US to talk to monitors and officials, outlined the employment goals for the world’s largest crypto trading platform in an interview with Bloomberg News in New York on Wednesday.


“I’ve been a regulator all my life,” Teng said. “Government agencies are important.” He declined to say whether he has met with the Securities and Exchange Commission during his trip. The SEC is suing Binance and wasn’t part of the US settlement.

That plea deal with the Justice Department and other US agencies included a $4.3 billion penalty for failures that let criminals and terror groups use the exchange. The firm faces years of compliance monitoring by the DOJ and the US Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.


Compliance Workforce

 


Binance plans to have a 700-strong compliance workforce by the end of 2024, up from about 500 currently, said 55-year-old Teng. His career includes stints as a senior regulator at the Monetary Authority of Singapore as well as at the city-state’s SGX stock exchange. He was also chief executive officer of the regulator at Abu Dhabi’s international financial center.


Teng said Binance fields a growing number of requests from law-enforcement agencies worldwide, numbering 63,000 so far this year, up from 58,000 in 2023. 


Spending on compliance has climbed from $158 million two years ago and is set to increase further, he said. The monitors appointed by the US agencies, Forensic Risk Alliance and Sullivan & Cromwell, have already begun work. 


“They’re going to do an assessment,” Teng said. “We’re very early in the journey.” The monitors keep an eye on the company’s anti-money-laundering and transaction-tracking efforts, he added.

In June, a judge ruled that the bulk of the SEC lawsuit against Binance and its billionaire co-founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao can proceed. The SEC sued Binance and Zhao in 2023 for mishandling customer funds, misleading investors and regulators, and breaking securities rules. The defendants contested the claims and asked for the case to be dismissed. Teng said Binance will continue to fight the accusations.


Teng took over as Binance’s chief executive after Zhao stepped down as part of the US plea deal. Zhao was subsequently sentenced to a four-month jail term.


Teng’s Changes

 


Under Teng, Binance has adjusted the way it works with prime brokers, tightened requirements for listing new digital tokens and spun off its venture arm. But the company has yet to formally designate a global headquarters or release a fully audited set of accounts. 


Teng said the business continues to be profitable and that Dubai, Abu Dhabi and another city he declined to specify are on a short-list of potential locations for the headquarters. A company spokesperson two months ago said Binance’s headcount was upwards of 5,000 staff.

The planned hiring spree also encompasses customer service roles, according to Teng. The expansion follows a rebound in crypto prices and trading volumes from a bear market in 2022 that led to a spate of job losses across the sector.

 

First Published: Aug 22 2024 | 9:33 PM IST



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ChrysCapital exits Eris Lifesciences; sells 7.27% stake for Rs 1,187 cr

ChrysCapital exits Eris Lifesciences; sells 7.27% stake for Rs 1,187 cr


Its revenue rose to Rs 720 crore for the first quarter of 2024-25 from Rs 467 crore in the year-ago period.


Private equity major ChrysCapital on Thursday exited Eris Lifesciences by selling its entire 7.27 per cent stake in the company for Rs 1,187 crore via open market transaction, while Infinity Partners picked up shares of the firm.


Eris Lifesciences Ltd is a listed Indian pharmaceutical company and a leading player in the domestic branded formulations market.


According to the block deal data available on the National Stock Exchange (NSE), ChrysCapital through its affiliate Emerald Investment Ltd sold 98,86,882 shares, amounting to a 7.27 per cent stake in Ahmedabad-based Eris Lifesciences.


The shares were disposed of at an average price of Rs 1,201 apiece, taking the transaction value to Rs 1,187.41 crore.


These shares were picked up by Infinity Partners at the same price, as per the data on the exchange.


Shares of Eris Lifesciences rose 2.13 per cent to close at Rs 1,238.65 apiece on the NSE.


Earlier this month, Eris Lifesciences said its consolidated profit after tax declined by 4.5 per cent year-on-year to Rs 89 crore for the quarter ended on June 30, 2024.


The drug maker reported a profit after tax of Rs 94 crore in the April-June quarter of the last fiscal.


Its revenue rose to Rs 720 crore for the first quarter of 2024-25 from Rs 467 crore in the year-ago period.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Aug 22 2024 | 8:50 PM IST



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Red-hot thematic investing theme receives a 'passive' boost in July

Red-hot thematic investing theme receives a 'passive' boost in July


Illustration: Binay Sinha


Thematic investing is the flavour of the season, with the category becoming the top draw in the equities segment.


It is set to receive a further boost with a slew of passive product launches in this space. Industry players see this as the cosmosis of two forces. 


Passive investing has already been gaining popularity over the years on account of their low cost of investing and relative outperformance.


In recent weeks, six new fund offerings (NFOs) on the passive side collected over Rs 2,600 crore.


These include Tata Nifty India Tourism Index Fund, Motilal Oswal Nifty India Defence Index Fund, Kotak BSE PSU Index Fund, Axis Nifty 500 Index Fund, Bandhan Nifty Total Market Index Fund and HDFC Nifty100 Low Volatility 30 Index Fund.

This saw index funds added a record 1 million new investment accounts (folios) in July.

chart

 


This accounted for 14 per cent of the total net folio additions for mutual funds (MFs) during the month.


By comparison, index funds had added just 0.4 million accounts in June.


According to MF executives, the sharp surge in index fund folio count in July was a result of a slew of NFOs, particularly in the thematic space.


“There is no doubt that index funds are gaining traction with investors. The industry has seen many new types of index being launched over the last few months.  We ourselves have launched a series of index funds including India’s first Tourism index fund by the name — Tata Nifty Tourism index fund.  All this is leading to increased interest levels among investors,” said Anand Vardarajan, CBO, Tata Asset Management.


The recent index fund offering notwithstanding, investor affinity for thematic funds is more pronounced on the active side.


Sectoral and thematic funds are now the largest active equity MF category with the assets under management (AUM) growing over two-folds in the last one year.


The category, considered to be the riskiest among all MF offerings, had an AUM of Rs 4.21 trillion at the end of July vis-a-vis Rs 2 trillion in July 2023.


Pratik Oswal, chief of business Passive Funds, Motilal Oswal AMC, also said the surge in folio additions reflects growing investor interest in thematic funds.


“Motilal Oswal AMC added around 417,000 new passive folios last month alone, reflecting a significant rise in investor interest in thematic index funds. While it’s difficult to estimate the growth rate of other players, the usual trend in the index fund category is around 350,000 to 400,000 each month,” he said.


Overall, index funds have added 2.2 million folios in the first four months of this financial year.


The tally is already 59 per cent of the 3.7 million net additions seen in FY24, according to data from the Association of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi).


Apart from thematic offerings, the demand for index funds is also being driven by factor funds. Several AMCs have launched index funds which track various single or double factor indices.


In a recent report, the Motilal Oswal MF noted that the AUM of passive funds have surged past Rs 10 trillion and now account for 17 per cent of the market share.


As of July, index funds had an AUM of Rs 2.6 trillion, while exchange traded funds (ETFs), except for gold ETFs, were managing Rs 7.8 trillion.


Commodity ETFs, which track gold and silver prices, and most of the international MF offerings also fall in the passive bracket.


ETFs — that mimic the returns of their underlying benchmark index such as the Nifty, Sensex or the MSCI Emerging Market index — have seen their popularity rise over the past decade.


Domestic ETF’s assets under management (AUM) have surged 68x from Rs 15,000 crore in 2015 to Rs 10 trillion at present.

First Published: Aug 22 2024 | 8:49 PM IST



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