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Infosys reports a net profit of Rs.5,350Cr. in Q1 FY23. 

Infosys reports a net profit of Rs.5,350Cr. in Q1 FY23. 

IT leader, Infosys reported a net profit of Rs. 5,360 crores. compared to Rs.5,195 in June 2021. The firm missed the street estimation of Rs.5,550 crores.
Total revenue for India’s second-largest firm was at Rs. 34,470 crores
a jump of 23.6% YOY. The operating margin was at 20.1%, down by
1.4% QOQ. It managed to beat the revenue estimates but disappointed PAT and margin. The EBIT margin declined to 20.1% by 150 bps onshore and offshore wake hikes were higher resulting in lower PAT because of constrained talent supply. Though the quarterly attribution was down and jumped from 27.7% in March 2022 to 28.4% in the June quarter, the
attribution elevated by 70 bps. Infosys was double-digit across
business segments in constant currency. Digital technologies grow by 37.5% CC. The total free cash flow during the June quarter was at 5,106 crores and improvement in ROE to 31%. Large-deal TCV for the quarter was at 170 crores down by 25% QOQ and 34% YOY. They have updated earning guidance from 13% YOY to 14%- 16% YOY giving a strong demand.
The net addition stood at 21,171 employees VS 13,599 in last 4 quarter.
The company is on track to hire 50,000 fresher in FY23. The company got 19 new deals. Management said that they have a healthy pipeline for the near future. The total number of active clients was at 1778 clients compared to 1741 clients in March 2022 and 1195 in June 2021. The top 10 clients contribute 13% of total revenue and the top 10 clients contribute around 20% of the revenue. Revenue per employee was down by 1.4% QOQ to US$56.9K due to investments in fresher and the total employees were recorded at 3,35,186.
We consider the margins to be under pressure due to an increase in travel, wage hikes in senior management, and supply side-cost in Q2 FY23. The management mentioned in the concall that the pricing is stable, thus we expect 21% to 25% in the near future. The scrip closed at Rs.1,503 down by
0.81 %. The stock touched a 52-week high of Rs. 1953.90 and a 52-week low of Rs.1,367.15. The Bangalore-based firm’s market cap is at Rs. 6.30 lakh crores.

L&T Technology Services Ltd Q1 Results Update.

L&T Technology Services Ltd Q1 Results Update.

 

L&T Technology Services Ltd Q1 Results Update.

 

L&T Tech Services reported net profit of Rs 274 crore for the June quarter, up 27% year-on-year. Sequentially the profit was up 4.7% from Rs.262 crores, driven primarily by revenue growth and operational execution.

Revenue for the company grew at 23% YoY at Rs 1,873 crore, and 6.7% QoQ sequentially from Rs. 1,756 crores, fuelled by healthy revenue growth in top clients and a demand uptick in its transportation vertical.
The firm’s dollar revenue grew 3.2% at $239.5 million, and came in at 4.7% in constant currency. Growth was led by plant engineering and industrial products, benefitting from spending on digital manufacturing, energy transition, and smart & connected products.

Transportation led the verticals with a 23.8% growth due to demand from the aerospace and rail segments. The plant engineering vertical clocked 20.3%. Medical devices grew 13.9% and industrial products was up 13.6%.

India’s business grew 19.6% on year and North America rose 17.6%. Operating margins stood at 18.3%, down 30 basis points sequentially but up 100 bps YoY.

During the quarter, LTTS won a $50 million plus deal, four $15 million deals and two deals with TCV of $10 million.

For the June quarter, EBIDTA margins stood at 21.4%. However, margins were better managed despite higher attrition. The company reported attrition of 23.2% for the Q1 FY23, up from 20.4% in Q4 FY22. The total headcount now stands at 21,433. The company added 572 employees sequentially

EBIT stands at Rs. 3,43.4 crores for the quarter as compared to 2623 crores YoY and Rs. 3,274 crores QoQ. EBIT margin is at 18.3% as against 17.3 in the previous quarter, driven by operational efficiencies. During the quarter, the company had gains from currency depreciation which were offset by higher employee benefit costs.

Other income was at Rs. 34 crores, slightly higher on a sequential basis due to higher Income from Investment. At the end of Q1FY23, the patent portfolio of LTTS stood at 913, out of which 625 are co-authored with its customers and the rest are filed by LTTS. 

Currently, the shares of the company are trading at Rs. 3440.35, up by 18.10 points or by 0.53%. On 25th July 2022, the stock opened at Rs. 3417.80 and previously closed at Rs. 3422.25. The stock hit an intraday high of Rs. 3478.55 and an intraday low of Rs. 3401.20. The market cap is Rs. 36,315 crores.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tata Metaliks Q1 net profit falls sharply to Rs 1.22 crores.

 

Jindal Steel & Power Ltd Q1 FY23 Result Update: Net profit jumps to Rs. 2,771 crores.

 

 

Oberoi Realty reported a decline in Book Value.

 

 

 

 

 

Global Equity Funds Face Record $38.66 Billion Outflows Amid Market Valuation Concerns

Equity valuation: Definition, Importance and Process.

Equity Valuation

 

What is Equity valuation?

Equity Valuation is a process conducted by financial experts to determine the fair market value of a particular company’s assets or equity securities. Usually, investors evaluate the company’s true value of its equity before investing. They evaluate using various techniques by looking at their business management, capital structure and their performance, expected future earnings, and current market value of their assets. Commonly, there are two types of equity valuation methods. The first is the absolute valuation method. It finds the true value of a stock based on fundamental analysis. The second is the relative valuation method which uses comparison techniques. It compares the company with peer company ratios such as the P/E ratio to derive the equity value of a particular stock.

 

Significance of Equity Valuation:

Systematic – The stock market is largely dependent on equity valuation. The stock market includes varieties of stocks from all sectors and industries. So, the market value fluctuates every minute due to the change in information that the market receives on the basic equity valuation. Valuation is the backbone of the whole financial system. It allows companies to operate with strong business models. Only those who are fundamentally strong are in top valuations. 

Individual – Along with the micro-level, equity valuation helps at an individual level also. Due to the equity valuation, the stock’s market value fluctuates every minute. This is due to the change in information that the market receives. So, a person evaluates varying effects and comes up with different results. 

Process of equity valuation:

Understanding various factors in macro environments – Firstly, it is important to understand the industry in which the company operates as its performance is highly influenced by the economic factors, their factors, and their operations. Economic parameters create a strong base for any equity valuation.

Forecasting – Investors forecast performance after considering not only currently trending but after evaluating all the past performances as a strong evaluation and analyzing technique is needed for coming to a final forecast. Cost and sales are important factors too in any forecasting for which investors need strong intricate knowledge base and experience.

Choosing the appropriate equity valuation model – As there are multiple valuation techniques and models available for investors they need to choose after understanding the sector, industry, and company’s business model. It is the responsibility of an analyst to select appropriate techniques.

Valuation Figure – After applying the valuation model, the next step is the final valuation. Analysts can come up with a single figure or range. However, investors prefer figures which have ranges. Different analysts may come up with different values because of using different models or considering different factors.

Final decision – It is based on all the factors and considering all the possible uncertainties. Finally, analysts come up with the final decision for a particular stock whether to buy, sell or hold depending on the current market price and intrinsic value.

 

Various Methods of Equity Valuation:

Based on different factors such as liquidity value, book value, replacement value, discounting factor, earnings ratios, price to book value, and profitability ratio, different equity valuation methods are broadly classified.

Balance sheet techniques – It utilizes all the information available on the balance sheet. It considers all the standards of accounting. Some of the major techniques in the Balance sheet method are Book value Method, liquidation method, and replacement method.

Discounted cash flow method – This model first evaluates the present value of future dividends for getting the present value of equity. They have different assumptions in different models like the single growth model, multi-period model, constant growth model, free cash flow model, two-stage model, H model, and zero growth model. One of the known methods is the dividend discount method.

Earnings multiple technique or Relative valuation – It is also known as the comparable method. It uses peers’ and competitors’ values to determine the value of equity. Earnings or relative valuation includes ratios such as price-to-earnings ratio, price-to-book value ratio, and price-to-sales value ratio.

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What are Gold funds and what are the benefits?

 

 

 

LTFH Q1FY24: Retail Portfolio Grows 31% YoY, Reaches ₹84,444 Cr

MSME definition to be widened further.

MSME definition to be widened further.

Government considers further broadening of the definition of micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs). With a vision to extend various official benefits to small businesses and to make sure that their schemes reach the maximum eligible firms, government is trying to pull as many micro, small and medium businesses as possible under the ambit of the definition of MSME.

The original definition:

Definition of MSME used to define micro units as having investment not more than Rs 25 lakh, small unit having investment between Rs 25 lakh -Rs 5 cr and medium one having investment between Rs 5 cr – Rs 10 cr. And in case of services, investment in a micro enterprise was must up to Rs 10 lakh in equipment, for that of small enterprise between Rs 10 lakh and Rs 2 cr and that of medium between Rs 2 cr – Rs 5 cr bracket. While announcing the Rs 20 lakh cr economic package, it was announced that definition of MSME shall be amended by making alterations in the both, the investment limits as well as in the annual turnover figures.

According to the new definition of MSME that had announced along with the economic package announcement, micro units were to be defined as those units whose investment does not exceed Rs 1 cr and have annual turnover limit Rs 5 crore, while a small enterprise shall be the one having investment between Rs 5 crore and Rs 10 crore and annual turnover limit of Rs 50 crore and medium units to have investment between Rs 10 cr – Rs 20 cr and annual turnover of Rs 100 cr. Government also made it clear that MSMEs should now cover both manufacturing and service enterprises alike.

Now the above definition stands further changes in limits:

MSME and Transport Minister, Nitin Gadkari mentions to media that the ministry is planning to increase the recently set annual turnover limit of Rs 100 cr for medium enterprises to Rs 250cr, this 250cr limit of turnover may also exclude export sales for the purpose of calculation of eligibility of the firm.
With the same intension the investment limit to qualify the definition of medium enterprise under MSME has been proposed to increase to Rs 50 cr from Rs 20 cr.

The two suggestions mentioned above are pending for approval from Ministry of Finance:

This move shall also motivate those MSMEs that fell in the earlier brackets of limitations to now explore and take risks to further expand and make more investments and enhance turnovers, as they shall be able to avail the same benefits even after growing a little big. This move shall therefore lead to witnessing growth in this sector. The NSS survey of 2015-16 reveals the count of MSMEs in India, totaling to 6.34 cr, comprising of around 6.3 crore micro units, while 3.31 lakh small and 5,000 medium firms.

 

What is on platter for the MSMEs?

On achieving the status of MSMEs, businesses would get assorted benefits like periodic governmental and regulatory relief, besides 25 per cent of official blocking of loans under priority sector lending programmes. Further, as per the conditions, these shall be eligible for enjoying recently announced benefits like additional collateral free working capital loan up to 20 per cent having guaranteed capital of Rs 3 lakh cr. Rs 20,000 cr and Rs 50,000 cr funds to further boost equity base of these small business that have growth potential.

According to the government, the collateral-free loan alone is expected to aid 45 lakh MSME units. There shall be different rules relating to insolvency for MSMEs. Promoters who are not the willful defaulters shall be allowed to bid for their stressed assets whereas large companies are not allowed to do the same. In FY19, 42,458 MSMEs together enabled central public sector firms to procure 30 per cent of their procurement worth Rs 33,264 cr. Further, MSME Ministry had also revealed that these businesses are known to have created 11.10 cr job opportunities in FY16 and MSMEs form 29 per cent of the total GDP.

 

 

 

Bharti Airtel Stock Hits Fresh 52-Week High on Strong Market Momentum

CANF net profit at Rs.162.21Cr. in Q1FY23.

CANF net profit at Rs.162.21Cr. in Q1FY23.

Can Fin Homes Ltd. (CANF) declared its result on July 21st, 2022 for Q1 FY23. The company reported total revenue of Rs. 611.58 Cr. compared to Rs. 561.29 Cr. in the previous quarter. The net profit jumped to Rs. 162.21 Cr. for Q1 FY23, up by 31.96% QoQ.

The loan book reached Rs. 27538 Cr. with a clientele base of 2.15 lakhs, up by 24% in the current quarter YOY. The disbursements in Q1 stood at Rs. 1722 Cr. compared to Rs. 2705 Cr. in March 2022. In the June quarter, NII increased by 5.5% to Rs. 250.40 cr. The Net Interest Margin (NIM) decreased to 3.60% in June 2022 from 4.07% in the previous quarter. The average business was reduced by 0.63 bps to Rs. 146.48 crores per branch (vs. 147.11 crores on March 22). The cost/income ratio tanked from 19.84% to 15.84% in Q1 FY23 QOQ. The asset quality declined as GNPA increased by 5.39% and was recorded at Rs. 179.78Cr. this was Rs. 170.59Cr. on March 22. The NNPA was at Rs. 81.94 crores, or 0.30%. An increase in the cost of borrowing was witnessed at 5.80% on June 22 versus 5.66% in June 2021 and 5.56% in March 22, due to the hike in the interest rates by the RBI. The EPS was at Rs. 12.18 on June 22, compared to Rs. 9.23 on March 22 and Rs. 8.17 on June 21.
The average ticket size for incremental housing loans was Rs. 21 lakhs and for non-housing loans was Rs. 9 lakhs. The salaried and professional segments constitute around 74% of the O/S loan book. Housing loans were 90%, while non-housing loans were 10%.

CANF has better-quality assets among its peers, but we remain observant of seasonality in the portfolio that could lead to higher credit costs. They have achieved strong growth in the loan book and we expect a minimal spread/margin compression over the next few years. Though housing companies continue to face headwinds because of current macroeconomic situations, the NBFCs’ ability to maintain adequate liquidity, control asset quality, and diversification remains the key differentiator. With the continued growth in the loan book, CANF will witness robust growth. But due to the hike in interest rates, the NBFC will have weak demand for housing among the salaried, non-professional and self-employed classes. However, the expenses will go up due to aggressive branch expansion plans and operational costs. The NBFC has consistently increased its reserves and surplus to come out of uncertainty, which amounted to Rs. 3,040 Cr. in March 2022.

The stock is currently trading at Rs. 552, up by 11.25 points or 2.09%. It touched an intraday high of Rs.590 and a low of Rs.540. The 52-week high for the share price was at Rs.722, and the 52-week low was recorded at Rs.407

Role of Financial Intermediaries

Role of Financial Intermediaries

Role of Financial Intermediaries.

 

Entities that act as a middleman between two or more individuals for any financial transaction like an investment bank or mutual funds are known as financial intermediaries. The main goal of these intermediaries is to build an efficient market and lower costs for conducting any business. However, intermediaries do not accept any deposits from the public. They provide services like leasing and factoring.

The overall stability of the economy depends on the performance of financial intermediaries and the growth of the financial services industry. They move excess funds from the parties who have excess capital to those parties who need funds. This creates an efficient market with a relatively lower cost of conducting business. 

 

Major financial intermediaries and their Roles:

The main role of any financial intermediary is to take deposits from savers and lend them to borrowers. They also pool small savings and collectively invest those funds in assets like stocks, bonds, or any other financial assets. Further, they provide loans to small consumers and businesses. However, there any many types of intermediaries based on these roles

Insurance Companies – There are different types of insurance companies. Almost all companies work in the same way. First, they try to find customers (in large numbers) who need coverage. It can be for anything such as a car, home, or health policy. After these customers purchase this insurance policy. Then in the future, whenever customers make a claim and request the insurance company a payout, the insurance company will provide it through that pool of money.

Pension Funds – Full-time employees use their savings for their retirement by investing. The pension fund organizations work on certain factors. Such as risk, the period for which investment is made, and matching contributions. Their employer matches that contribution to a certain extent. When the employee retires, they will get all the contributions with interest.

Banks – Banks are the oldest and most trusted financial intermediaries around the world. They provide multiple services to their customers such as saving, investing, and lending with many other customized services to fit specific criteria. For example, when an individual wants to raise a mortgage, then banks may provide money from another person’s deposits into the same bank for saving. Along with small individuals, large companies also prefer banks to help find investors.

Stock exchanges – Before stock exchanges were invented, it was a very tedious process for buying any company’s stocks. But one can use stock exchanges to trade as they facilitate the entire process with transactions.

Benefits of Financial intermediaries:

1. Expertise – Financial intermediaries not only have specialist knowledge but also all resources which are needed to assess the risk. They have the financial expertise to anticipate the profitability of any proposed projects.  
2. Value Transformation – Financial intermediaries can help both small and large borrowers at a time. They collect money from small investors and give them to the borrowers who need a large sum of money.
3. Transaction costs are reduced– Financial intermediaries help to reduce overall transaction cost as they provide facilities to a large number of borrowers through which overall transaction is balanced.
4. Risk Diversification – Financial intermediaries ensure that their entire risk is diversified. In case any borrowers have defaulted, it does not affect the savings of other depositors. 
5. Easy borrowing – Financial intermediaries ease borrowing by giving them various facilities or options to borrowers. So the borrowers do not require to visit a bank every time.

 

Role of Financial Intermediaries

 

 

What Happens when Businesses go Bankrupt.

 

 

 

Shipa Medicare reported an 85 lakh net profit.

Just Dial net loss widens to Rs 48 cr in Q1 FY23.

 

Just Dial net loss widens to Rs 48 cr in Q1 FY23.

On 15th July 2022, Just Dial Dial reported a consolidated net loss of Rs 48.36 crore in Q1 FY23 compared with a net loss of Rs 3.52 crore in Q1 FY22. The loss was driven by negative other income. Other income stood at Rs 60 crore for the quarter due to mark-to-market (MTM) losses on treasury portfolio owing to the significant increase in bond yields (135-150 bps QoQ for 2-3 year AAA bonds). The net profit margin foe the June quarter was -26% as compared to 2-2.1% in June 21 and 13.3% in March 22 quarter.

Net revenue was at Rs 185.60 crore for the June quarter as against Rs 165.41 crore during the same period in the previous year, registering a growth of 12.2%. On a sequential basis, net sales rose 11.4% from Rs. 166.7 crores. The employee expenses were higher during this quarter. This was on account of increase in the  hiring across critical functions such as technology, content, sales and marketing teams. In sales department, headcount was up 4.2% QoQ.

Just Dial reported a pre tax loss of Rs 59.84 crore in June 22 as against a pre tax loss of Rs 4.39 crore recorded in June 21. Total expenditure increased by 3.71% to Rs 185.45 crore in Q1 FY23 as against Q1 FY22.

The company recorded Adjusted operating EBITDA, excluding ESOP expenses, at Rs 11 crore in Q1 FY23 as compared to Rs -10 crore in Q1 FY22 and Rs -8 crore in Q4 FY22.

Deferred Revenue stood at Rs 353.4 crore, up 4.5% QoQ and 15% YoY. The QoQ growth in deferred revenue driven by 12.2% QoQ growth in collections to Rs 200.9 crore.

Cash and Investments stands at Rs 3,739.6 crore as on June 2022 compared to Rs 1,533 crore as on June 2021 and Rs 3,820.1 crore in March quarter.

Total Traffic (unique visitors) for the quarter stood at 147.9 million, up 19.1% YoY and 2.1% QoQ. 84.3% traffic originated on Mobile platforms, 11.3% on Desktop/ PC and 4.4% on our Voice platform.

Total Active Listings stood at 32.8 million as on 30 June 2022, an increase of 7.4% YoY and 2.8% QoQ. During the June quarter 907,228 listings were added  to the database. Active Paid Campaigns at the end of Q1 FY23 was at 483,690, up 10.5% YoY and 4.8% QoQ. Robust paid campaigns addition of 22,195  was due to aggressive focus on selling monthly payment plans.

 

Currently, the shares of Just Dial are trading at Rs.  585.60 as against the previous close of Rs. 591.55, declined by 5.25 points or by 0.89%. The stock opened at Rs. 593.70. The market cap of the company is Rs. 4,940 crores.

 

Just Dial net loss widens to Rs 48 cr in Q1 FY23.
Image shown is for representation only

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tata Metaliks Q1 net profit falls sharply to Rs 1.22 crores.

 

Jindal Steel & Power Ltd Q1 FY23 Result Update: Net profit jumps to Rs. 2,771 crores.

 

 

Oberoi Realty reported a decline in Book Value.

 

 

 

 

 

Kalpataru IPO Set to Raise ₹1,590 Crore, Signaling a Bold Move in Real Estate

How to minimize taxes when selling real estate.

How to minimize taxes when selling real estate.

 

On the off chance that you sell your home at a cost more noteworthy than the purchasing value, at that point you will be eligible to pay tax on the income that you make by selling your home. Whether you sell a rental estate or land after owning it for more than 2 years, you become eligible to pay 20% LTCG tax upon indexing. However, if you’re making a Rs 50 lakh income, you will probably pay Rs 10 lakh as taxes. An assessee can re-invest the sum of LTCG in residential estate and assert an exemption under sections 54 And 54F of the Income Tax Act.

Short-term capital gain:

STCG ‘s property is seen to be a profit by the selling of property possessed by you for less than two years. As an investor, you are eligible to pay tax on STCG on properties as per the relevant marginal tax levy.

 

Long-term capital gain:

If you sell the property that has been held by you for more than three years, the benefit resulting from this sale will be called an LTCG. LTCG is measured as the gap between net sales and adjusted property costs. The advantage of indexation is to reduce the effect of inflation on the profits generated by selling land in such a manner that the real earnings on the land are taxable. It is focused on the premise that the valuation of capital is gradually decreasing as a consequence of inflation and thus, it is unjust to charge the long-term owner of the land on the cumulative profits that have accumulated to him purely as a result of inflation.

 

Exemption:

1. Section 54, where interest is rendered in the acquisition of a new property:

Under section 54, you can claim an exception from capital gain when you contribute a few or the entirety of the benefits by selling a home in India into another real estate.

Rules:

HUFs and individuals are exempted and are available for one residential real estate. The capital income from property selling will be balanced against purchasing a new residential building. The property which has been sold and bought will be in India. The current residential property should be purchased either one year before selling the existing property, or within 2 years after the sale date of the old real estate. If you intend to build a house, the development of the house should be done within 3 years from the selling date of the preceding home. When you purchase or build a new home, you may not be willing to sell it in less than 3 years. When you sell it within 3 years, you won’t receive the capital gain depreciation advantage and the sales profits will be taxable. Those 3 years are measured from either the day the new house acquires or finishes its function. The value of exemption claimed is smaller than the sum of capital income or the expense of purchasing a new home.

 

2. Section 54F, in which the transaction will be made on the acquisition of new land or another house:

Rules:

Exemption for HUFs and individuals. The new property will be acquired either one year before the selling of the existing property or within 2 years from the date of selling of the previous home. The exemption is valid only if the taxpayer does not possess more than one property on the day of sale of that estate, rather than the one the homeowner purchased to obtain the exemption under Section 54 F. When the whole selling concern is not invested but only a part selling concern is spent on the acquisition of new estate, the sum of the exemption must be correspondingly given.

 

Investment after selling property:

The new property will be the perfect place to spend your capital after selling your property. This could be your new property, or you could lease it to produce income. In the event of re-investment, there is still some uncertainty as to how to use the whole. Thus, you just need to spend the sum of capital gains to avoid the tax on LTCG. The most elevated estimation of capital benefits which you can put resources again is into some other property to make sure about a full exclusion is Rs 2 crore. When your capital gain is large, you will be forced to pay tax on surpassing Rs 2 crore. Note that you can use this right just once in your lifetime. Therefore, you should be cautious to make sure you don’t use this choice in the future.

 

Two properties:

Already, the assessment reasoning was just appropriate when you spent your capital gains in a single house. Nevertheless, it has now enabled citizens to spend their capital gains on two real estate properties, either by acquisition or development. In any case, this reinvestment decision will likewise need to remain under the complete top of Rs 2 crore.

 

 

 

Automation key to post pandemic production

Automation key to post pandemic production

Automation key to post-pandemic production

The COVID-19 pandemic has an adverse effect on the entire economy.

The Cairn Oil’s Barmer plant which was managed by more than 7,500 employees on site reduced to 1,500 employees as the pandemic led to the lockdown of many manufacturing plants worldwide. Still, the oil and gas plant could recover 1.6 lakh barrels of oil every day. Before the pandemic, they used to recover 1.8 lakh barrels every day. This decrease in number is because of the low demand and not because of the labor shortages.

Still Cairn can manage the production because of its investment in automation and digitization.
The chief digital officer of Cairn, Anand Laxshmivarahan said that the organization will be focusing on cost optimization post-COVID-19. Do the companies will be willing to invest only in automation.

Companies like Tata Steel, Mahindra, Toyota, Tata motors, Maruti, etc. have ample methods to automate their product lines.

The government has set norms and guidelines for the company to operate amid lockdown such as companies must screen the temperature of the employees, provide them with protective hand gloves, provide them with additional medical insurance, employees should follow social distancing norms while working, etc has led the companies to think about employing machines than men.

 Mahindra & Mahindra’s Chief Human Resource Officer, Rajeshwar Tripathi says that the use of robots has significantly helped the automobile sector to grow. The company has already automated the body shop, the paint shop and some of its final assembly line.

Tata Steel, Vice President, HR, Suresh Tripathi said that Tata Steel employs thousands of contract workers for maintenance of machinery. Instead of that they can use sensors that can estimate the problem well in advance.

Ceat, HR Head, Milind Apte also has mentioned about adopting digitisation and automation.

In the long run automation will prove to be profitable and will generate greater return on investment and will also prevent such shutdowns. Automation although leads to less number of manpower, it will also need new set of skilled people.

 

 

 

Contraction in Banking Stocks to around 6 percent due to RBI's repo rate cut

AU Small Finance Bank Q1 results were up by 32% and down 23% sequentially.

AU Small Finance Bank Q1 results were up by 32% and down 23% sequentially.

 

AU Small Finance Bank, a Jaipur-based lender, reported a net profit of Rs. 268 crores with a jump of 32% from 203 crores YOY but was down by 23% sequentially from Rs. 346 crores in March 2022. This result was achieved on account of an improvement in interest income and a sharp fall in provisions. The bank made provisions of Rs. 38 Cr., lower by 81% from a year ago on account of improvement in the asset quality and COVID-19 related provisions.

The bank’s PPoP was at Rs. 394 Cr, down by 18% as other incomes fell and operating expenses rose. The other income fell to Rs. 159 Cr. and was down by 26% due to losses of Rs. 55 Cr. in the treasury operations. The net interest income was reported to have increased by 35% from Rs.924Cr. to Rs.976Cr. The quarterly net interest margin (NIM) was lower by 1 bib from 6% to 5.9% YOY. It intends to maintain the NIM in the current fiscal year due to the rise in floating rates, which is 25% of the book. The asset quality for the bank also improved. Net NPS was at 0.56% on 30 June, down from 2.26% in Q1 FY23. The provision coverage ratio rose from 49% earlier to 72% by June 30. The AUM grew to Rs. 50161 Cr. with a jump of 37% YOY. The deposits witnessed a growth of 48% to Rs. 54,631 Cr. in the June quarter. The company’s market share is only 3% in the banking system and is optimistic about its growth. Almost 90% of the portfolio is secured, which is a good sign.

The banks’ (CAR) stood at 19.4% versus 23.1% in June 2021. The EPS was recorded at Rs. 4.25, which was down from Rs. 11.02 in the previous quarter. The key risks for the bank are surging inflation, resulting in widening losses; exposure to the informal sector; regional dependence on one state; and a slowdown in the economy. However, since the bank primarily serves the underserved category like farmers, low-wage earners, and the informal sector, it provides them with pricing power. As the monsoon was on time, it is likely to be favorable for the bank, since the farmers will be in a better position to repay the debt.

The script gave a 3-year return of 75.01% as compared to the 44.23% return given by the Nifty 100. The market cap for the company is Rs. 37,4111Cr. The stock is currently trading at Rs. 593.65, up by 16 points, or 2.84%, and has touched an intraday high of Rs. 601 and a low of Rs. 570. The 52-week high was at Rs. 732.98 and the 52-week low was at Rs. 462.

 

 

 

Mindtree Q1 FY23 Result Update: Net Profit jumps 37% YoY to Rs. 472 crores.

Tata Motors, Jaguar Land Rover Q1 sale at 78825 units down by 37%.