The country’s armed forces have a potent weapon in their arsenal. In May, the army inducted India’s first homegrown surface-to-air missile system Akash. The missile can take on multiple targets up to a maximum range of 25 km and at an altitude of 20 km, aided by sophisticated radars and control systems. Last month, the Indian Air Force (IAF) formally inducted the 96% indigenously made state-of-the-art weapon system. The IAF has signed an initial contract for eight squadrons of the Akash defence system, with each squadron featuring two firing units and four launchers.
In fact, between July 2014 and February 2015, the defence acquisition council has approved projects worth more than ₹1.7 lakh crore to kick-start the revival of the defence manufacturing sector. This is also reflected in order inflows. In Q4FY15, BEL saw a sudden spike in its order inflows by 83% to ₹3,100 crore. For FY15, the company recorded a 30% jump in inflows, with its order book now burgeoning at an all-time high of ₹21,053 crore, or more than 3X its sales turnover. “Of late, the speed of decision-making has improved and things have actually started moving faster, leading to a pick-up in business. We have orders worth ₹12,000 crore-₹15,000 crore lined up over the next eight to nine months,” says Sharma.
BEL will be the direct beneficiary of this because of its ready infrastructure.” While the company’s prospects are improving on the one hand, its stock hit a lifetime high of around ₹4,140 per share in February 2015, more than doubling over the past year. After a strong operating performance in Q1FY16, when the company’s margins improved by around 140 basis points and net profit grew by 137% to ₹60.7 crore, its stock spiked to around ₹3,920 a share. It is currently trading at 20X its estimated FY17 earnings, which is its highest valuation in the recent past. Because of the stretched valuations, it is quite possible that investors will have to live with moderate return expectations in the near term.
However, in the long run, growth in earnings will drive the share price and ensure higher return for investors. Apart from the impending growth, Bharat Electronics is one among the few companies that offer very little risk, be it balance sheet risk, promoter risk or business risk. It is a zero-debt company that is sitting on ₹4,800 crore of cash (20% of its market capitalisation), enjoys decent return ratios and offers a long-term growth opportunity for investors.
Over the next seven to eight years, India would invest more than $130 billion in the modernisation of its armed forces. Besides, under offset needs, more than ₹25,000 crore obligations are to be discharged over the next seven to eight years.
The list is long and includes artillery guns, submarines as well as naval vessels, which are now supposed to be manufactured in India under the Make In India programme. However, one critical issue here is that most Indian companies do not have the requisite skills, resources and technology for production, which is where FDI and policy initiatives such as foreign celebrations are encouraged for domestic manufacturing. “Initially, we might see some of the low-tech manufacturing being shifted to India. Even if that happens, it will be a huge advantage for the companies, which already have the know-how and capacities. For others, regulatory approval itself will prove to be a big hurdle,” says Kumar Kandaswami, senior director, infrastructure, at Deloitte.
In fact, R&D expenditure now accounts for 8.2% of BEL’s annual turnover, as against 5.9% about five years back. In fact, the company applied for nine product patents in FY15 alone. “We have also entered into many strategic alliances with defence laboratories, ordinance factory boards and other reputed global OEMs to address the emerging opportunities in these areas,” adds Sharma. The alliances include surface-to-air systems, air defence radars, battlefield management systems, sonar systems, next-generation night vision devices, gun programmes, inertial navigation systems, medium-altitude and long-endurance unmanned aerial vehicles, aerostat surveillance and communication systems. The company is also looking for more indigenous manufacturing for its own requirements, which moved up to 80% of its total turnover in FY15, against 60% in FY05.