Credit Suisse cuts metals, underweight on IT

"We book profits on metals, reversing positions added in December-20 and earlier, as P/B relative to market is near a 10-year high. It can go higher and stay elevated in a super-cycle, but we believe the current surge in apparent demand is due to an extreme inventory cycle and not a structural increase.

Credit Suisse is cutting metal stocks from overweight (OW) to underweight (UW) in its latest India market strategy.

"We book profits on metals, reversing positions added in December-20 and earlier, as P/B relative to market is near a 10-year high. It can go higher and stay elevated in a super-cycle, but we believe the current surge in apparent demand is due to an extreme inventory cycle and not a structural increase. Slower steel capacity increases due to ESG regulations are not sufficient to justify holding on, particularly given the Tata profit surge is iron-ore driven, and should correct," Credit Suisse said.

Advertisement

Further, with the aluminum-to-steel price ratio near a two-decade low, an inversion is likely: We remove Tata Steel from our 30-stock portfolio and add Hindalco, it said.

Credit Suisse has added beneficiaries of normalisation of input cost trends and re-jigged IT stock positions.

Advertisement

Also Read | BMW Group India pledges Rs 8 cr to strengthen fight against Covid

The strategy report said an extreme supply-chain bull-whip is likely driving chemicals too: inputs to adhesives, paints, cement, etc. As costs fall, firms with pricing power should benefit.

Advertisement

It has added Asian Paints and UltraTech as cement should benefit from lower costs of globally priced inputs (prices are local); sector P/B is at 11% premium to market, well below average; near-term concerns on adverse seasonality and weak discretionary demand from lowincome households are offset by firm-specific factors (e.g., steady share gains).

"We stay underweight on IT, but cut HCL Technologies (poor EPS revisions) and add to TCS (low relative P/E to INFY)", Credit Suisse said.

Advertisement

Also Read | Profit booking subdues equities, banking stocks down

"We stay Overweight on banks (private banks plus SBI), as we believe they are the best plays on our expectation of better-than-consensus expectation of medium-term growth. This also supports our heavy overweight on industrials (also has low relative P/B)", Credit Suisse said.

Advertisement

"We cut to Market Weight on Staples: we exit Nestle, add a smaller weight to Marico (growth in new businesses). Our continued Underweight on NBFCs is due to BFIN (cut further; now zero-weight on the stock) and Insurance. We are Underweight on pharma (overweight on Dr Reddy's and Aurobinndo), telecom , utilities, autos (mainly 2W) and energy", it added.

It said India has caught up on the April 2021 underperformance in May, with relative P/E now middle-of-past-ranges. Going forward, broader market performance is likely to be in line with global trends till evidence of medium term acceleration starts showing.

Advertisement

Advertisement