But analysts believe that the rising cost of raw materials should not perturb investors anymore as the company has implemented two consecutive price hikes in April and May to pass on the inflation cost and dealers’ incentive to consumers. “When there is strong demand in the market for a company’s models, it has a decent pricing power. TVS’ sales volume reflects the demand for its models and the company has already taken the price hike for majority of models in the month of April and May into account. These would take care of the major portion of cost inflation,” says Mitul Shah, vice-president — research, Reliance Securities.
The depreciating rupee is also expected to support margins as the company outperformed the industry in exports. Export volume grew by 49% YoY to 160,994 units due to a 50% and 82% rise in two-wheeler and three-wheeler volume, YoY, respectively.
Rich product mix and strong brands are expected to help TVS Motor ride the rural consumption growth story. “We envisage double-digit volume growth for the company fuelled by improving rural demand and favourable monsoon. TVS is better placed in the domestic two-wheeler space with a strong product portfolio at present,” says Shah. At Rs 555, TVS trades at 27x FY19 earnings compared with 17x and 16x for rivals Hero MotoCorp and Bajaj Auto.
Natco Pharma
While its peers are grappling with pricing pressure in the US and lacklustre growth in the domestic market, Natco Pharma reported net sales growth of 31% in Q4FY18 as compared to Q4FY17. The drug maker even rewarded its employees with a one-time special bonus in June for the second year in a row. But the Q4 results have failed to arrest a slide as the stock dropped 22% from its high of Rs 1,034 in January.
Natco Pharma’s revenue jumped 36% YoY in FY18 driven by windfall from limited competition in segments in which the company operates in the US. The company has carved out a niche market for itself in the US by tapping into areas like generic Copaxone where there is less competition (see: Standing out). Copaxone, which is the most prescribed drug for a brain-related disease — relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS) in the US, is touted to deliver revenue for Natco Pharma, before losing steam in FY20 as its rivals launch their generic versions. “Natco’s product strategy of focusing on segments where there is less competition has handsomely paid off. Unlike other players, they haven’t chased all the products and have focused on areas where there is limited competition,” says Praful Bohra, senior analyst, Equirus Securities.