Though net sales of the 1,961 companies (excluding banking & financial and state-owned oil & gas ones) that had declared results till August 13 had risen 3.6 per cent from last year, the rise was the lowest in 13 quarters.
The combined adjusted net profit (excluding extraordinary expenditure) declined 5.4 per cent from that in the corresponding period last year, to Rs 61,186 crore (Rs 611.86 billion).
And, while operating margins, at 15.7 per cent, inched up marginally on a year-on-year basis, the aggregate interest burden surged 19 per cent.
Given the volatility in earnings of public-sector oil companies, most research houses exclude these to arrive at the true picture of broad earning trends. The June quarter has proved it again.
If these firms were included in the sample, India Inc’s net profit would more than double.
The reason: The combined net loss of six oil & gas companies -- IndianOil, BPCL, HPCL, ONGC, Oil India and MRPL -- declined 98 per cent to Rs 780 crore, from Rs 35,049 crore in the year-ago quarter.
After adjusting for public-sector oil firms, according to experts, the results have not been encouraging; and the trend is likely to get worse in the coming quarters.
With the rate of inflation hovering between five per cent and six per cent, market participants say, the real demand growth (measured through sales growth) is in the negative territory.
Also, unlike earlier, a large part of India Inc is facing pressure on various counts.
Prasad Koparkar, senior director (industry & customised research), CRISIL Research, says: “The malaise seems to be spreading.
"Now, it is not restricted to a few sectors. Earlier, it started with capital goods, infra-related and construction sectors.
It has now spread to a much larger space — auto, chemicals, industrials and metals.
"So, barring three-four sectors, most are not doing well.”
Falling sales growth and rising interest cost have led to a decline in India Inc’s net profit.
Worse, things are not expected to improve anytime soon. Industry believes correcting structural issues will take at least two years.
If at all the rate-easing cycle begins again, that won’t be before March 2014.
Given the macroeconomic challenges, such as weakening of the rupee against the dollar and an elevated current account deficit, the Reserve Bank of India has abruptly halted its easing cycle.
Essar Group CFO V Ashok says: “We don’t expect any cut in interest rate before March 2014; and, this might derail investment plans.
"We are looking at dollarising our debt, as we have a natural hedge of export earnings. The environment will remain challenging through this and next financial year, as interest costs for companies will remain high.
"Though RBI has cut rates since last year, the reduction has not been passed on to borrowers.”
It’s not only small- and mid-cap companies that are facing the heat. Larger ones are also under pressure.
Rajat Rajgarhia, managing director (institutional equities), Motilal Oswal Securities, says: “Excluding BPCL, the top line growth for Nifty companies is just three per cent, while their profit is down four per cent from that in the same period a year ago.”
He adds the Q1 numbers are quite disappointing as the top line growth is the lowest in a decade (excluding the year of global crisis) for Nifty companies.
Also, pricing power has vanished across sectors.
Given that Ebitda grew by
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