Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Fundamentally Strong Reasons to Buy

Today’s movement did not help the markets much except giving us a day in the green. The markets are still stuck within a range and there are concerns amongst some circles that the markets may break down below the range rather than breaking out upwards. All that is very true. The markets could break down either way. There were some positive signals in the short term charts but those too seem to have fizzled out.

Stocks, or the markets as a whole, cannot be down forever. There has to be some value buying at some level. Agreed, that the GDP growth rate is slowing but it’s still a very good rate of growth. Agreed, that the inflation is rising and that the growth may become still slower but we will be able to control the inflation and the companies will be able to show good earnings despite inflationary pressures. And then the value buying will emerge. The smart money always buys first. We have to ensure that we become smarter and buy with them, if not before them.

Presented below is an analysis of the value and the fundamentals in the Indian markets, which I had received from someone in an email. The source is unknown so cannot give credit where it is due, for the same. The last leg of the recent bull market was driven more because of excess liquidity, leveraging and rumours than because of fundamental reasons. The same situation had been last seen in Feb-Mar 2000 when the markets rose because of the dotcom bubble. After Mar 2000 we saw a huge bear market which lasted almost three years. Is it going to be the same this time too? Let us do some number crunching and look at the fundamentals then and the fundamentals now.

In 2000-01, the markets were trading at a forward P/E (price to earnings ratio) of 35 times while this time they are trading at 16 times. The savings and investments (as a percentage of GDP) which were about 24% that time are now about 35%. The GDP growth that time was 4.35% and now it is 8.73%. Inflation was growing at 7.16% in 2000-01 and is now 4.21% (and is now catching up). What is important is the earnings growth which was (on an average) 4.43% 8 years ago is now between 17-20%. The rally, which at that time was mostly in the Technology, media and telecom sector is more broad based now.

The last 10 years data reveals that while the Sensex now is only 4.1 times of the Sensex then, whereas the total earnings now are 7.5 times of the total earnings then (of the BSE 500 stocks). The EPS (Earnings Per Share) has been showing a growth of more than 30% in the last two years and an average growth of about 25% in the last 5 years. Assuming that the EPS grows by 20% in the next three years, by 17% in the three years after that, 15% in the next block of three years and then by 12% in 2018 and if the P/E ratio stays at 16 times then by 2018, the Sensex should be trading at a value of 63485 in the year 2018. The following table shows what the value of the Sensex should be in each financial year upto 2018 at various P/E levels between 12 and 22, if the EPS follows the growth pattern shown above.

Sensex at 87292 at a P/E of 22 in 2018 is unbelievable. But you never know, with the kind of growth India has been witnessing, that may be very much possible.

The above exercise just goes on to prove that the fundamentals of our country and the Sensex are still very attractive. We should now start to look for buying opportunities whenever they come. A day when there is a gap down opening or a lot of panic should be a good day to start. Buy good blue chip stocks which have excellent fundamentals but have been badly beaten down by the street. These companies, over a period of time, will definitely outperform the broader market.

I remember the time nine years ago when I was doing my MBA and I remember our Portfolio Management professor showing exuberance (and a pleasant shock) over the Dow touching 10000 the previous day. And at that moment I was wondering whether I would ever see the Sensex at 10000 in my lifetime (Sensex was only about 3800 in those days). And I thought that even if I did see Sensex at 10000 some day, Dow would probably be somewhere near 50000 at that time. I didn’t have an idea that when Sensex touched 20000, Dow would have been languishing at 14000 levels. Well, that is history. Lets see what the future holds for us.

Happy investing!!!


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