Author: Shambhunath Shukla
Your's Truly
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
विजुअल मीडिया बनाम प्रिंट मीडिया
Author: Shambhunath Shukla
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Avon Corp: Caveat Emptor for fixed deposit investors
Weighs less on the trust front hence better left alone
Investors have often been lured to penny stocks trading at low multiples in hope of making a quick buck. Attention towards such companies is at peak when they are able to raise capital, especially from foreign markets. Over the past one year, retail investors who have been tricked into putting their money in such companies have found their entire capital erode with passage of time. Actually the shares issued in foreign markets in form of GDRs are bought by operators in collusion with promoters. A GDR issues generates ample interest in the domestic market. However, these GDRs are gradually converted into shares and sold to retail investors in India.
On 22 September 2011, market regulator SEBI had found 7 companies involved in such malpractices and banned such these companies from raising capital/money from the market.
AVON CORP was amongst the 7 companies banned by SEBI from raising money from the public. However some of our clients had been approached by the company to invest in their fixed deposit. Hence the note.
Rather than going into financial jugglery we thought it would be better if we could chronicle how our opinion on the company was formed.
About the company:
Avon Corp, a manufacturer of personal & industrial weighing scales, was brought to our attention in mid 2010 by one of our clients who was somewhat familiar with the company management and considered them hardworking and trustworthy.
A company managed by known and assumingly trustworthy people, trading a low PE of around 2-3x and growing over 50% was an ideal mutlibagger candidate.
The client asked us to go through the stock and provide our opinion. While initially lured by the strong financial, we soon discovered an increasing cash hole in the company and hence rated the stock an AVOID. Our reply, dated 19 Sept 2010, was as follows:
Hi
Finally got hold of Avon Corp Annual Report this weekend. Just trying to document my thoughts on the company so i don't loose thread at later date:
Positives:
- The company is trading at PBV of ~0.5x (80cr, Rs13 per share).
- It has net cash of 14 cr as against market cap of 36 cr.
- Net Current assets- Debt=90-22=68. Another mouthwatering proposition.
- Impressed by growth over last 5 years.....5x sales and 10x revenues.
- Also impressed with future prospects due to its strong and cost effective product line.........expecting ballpark sales to reach Rs400 cr by 2015, at current net margin of 10% that gives 40cr profit.
But i guess you know all this and the reason i am writing at almost midnight is the following:
Constant dilution in equity: While pat increase from 1 cr to 11 over last 5 years, EPS halved largely due to increase in equity base, raising doubts on management's intentions.
While profits surged the company's operating CF has always been negative, not a sign of viable business
Also the management issued GDRS (4.8cr shares, pre GDR it was 1.65cr) at Rs.10 effective cappig the upside over the medium term. Now without the GDR the company would have at EPS of ~6. Not sure why the issue was at such low valuation, PE of less than 2.
So either business is not in such good shape as PNL points and the promoters need cash to hide the operational efficiencies. The alternative is a sinister one, the promoters are issuing shares to themselves thru proxies at throwaway prices and taking minority shareholders for the ride.
As luck would have it the company’s price rose more than 50% after our AVOID rating, but we kept our faith. Soon, the so called “foreign investors” started converting their GDRs into shares and offloading them in Indian markets. The share price tanked from 52 week high of 11 to 4 by August end prompting us to issue the following note on 24 August 2011:
Was going through the shareholding pattern of Avon Corp. Relating to the GDR issue of last year, it seems all have been converted into shares and sold to retail investors. This further raises my apprehensions on the company's management. I believe the company had not received cash from the GDR issue. Most likely the promoters had issued GDR to themselves which they sold to public making a clean gain of nearly Rs50Cr.
Not considering it an investment worthy stock anymore.
This time fortune favoured and SEBI banned Avon Corp and its promoters from accessing capital market on 22 September 2011 largely for the same reasons that raised our doubts on the company.
However to our surprise, some of our clients have informed that they have been approached by Avon Corp for making investment in their fixed deposit. Given our analysis, the company’s past track record and SEBI’s ban we believe it would be prudent and pragmatic to stay away from making any investment in the company.
HAPPY INVESTING
Source: Anavaran Investments
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Investment rationale of Atul Ltd: Some jottings
- 1200 acre land bank on Mumbai-Ahmedabad highway,
- 100 cr investment in Wyeth,
- 60 years operational history and proven track record,
- Trustworthy promoters with sale 50% holding. promoter
- Integrated operations with captive power plant, infrastructure and water resources.
- On MCap of 450Cr the company is generating sales of 1500Cr and net profit of 90Cr
- Continued and rising dividend since 2001.
Concerns:
- Debt of over 300Cr is worrisome. But most of it is working capital loan.
- Rising raw material prices. Weakening dollar will further take a toll on cost front.
- Weak market sentiments.
Outlook: Despite concerns over short term the stock could return decent return over coming 2-3 years.
Source: Anavaran Investments
Thursday, March 18, 2010
A RARE BUY
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Can I Speak, Ma'am??????
Without getting into merits and demerits of what Hussein did, our citizens should have rights to express their views freely and their safety must be ensured. Borrowing Voltaire words "I may not agree with what you have to say but i will defend to the death yo? I disagree with what you say but will defend to the death your right to say it?"
But what can we expect from a nation where first change in constitution was made to gag the free airing of opinion. While first amendment to US constitution enhanced its citizens right to air their opinions.
Not to be branded cynical about our the improvement in our society and to point that things are how worse in our neighboring countries here are some lines by Poet Kaifi Azmi
"The Sindhi that came from Pakistan to India is called 'Seth'. The Muslim that left India for Pakistan is called 'Mohajir'. Bade Ghulam Ali was asked by a Pakistani luminary, Mohammed All, to sing. He started "mohe na chhedo Nandlal" and was interrupted rudely with a "kucch Pakistani music gaiye". He retorted: "Mori gardan no marodo (don't twist my neck) Mohammed Ali". Then upped and left, returned to reclaim his Indian citizenship"
But a nation that has aims to be the NEXT Superpower can't be satisfied with Consolation prize......can we????????
Friday, February 19, 2010
Time Magazine's list of 100 best English novels
Full List
A - B
- The Adventures of Augie March (1953), by Saul Bellow
- All the King's Men (1946), by Robert Penn Warren
- American Pastoral (1997), by Philip Roth
- An American Tragedy (1925), by Theodore Dreiser
- Animal Farm (1946), by George Orwell
- Appointment in Samarra (1934), by John O'Hara
- Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret (1970), by Judy Blume
- The Assistant (1957), by Bernard Malamud
- At Swim-Two-Birds (1938), by Flann O'Brien
- Atonement (2002), by Ian McEwan
- Beloved (1987), by Toni Morrison
- The Berlin Stories (1946), by Christopher Isherwood
- The Big Sleep (1939), by Raymond Chandler
- The Blind Assassin (2000), by Margaret Atwood
- Blood Meridian (1986), by Cormac McCarthy
- Brideshead Revisited (1946), by Evelyn Waugh
- The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1927), by Thornton Wilder
C - D
- Call It Sleep (1935), by Henry Roth
- Catch-22 (1961), by Joseph Heller
- The Catcher in the Rye (1951), by J.D. Salinger
- A Clockwork Orange (1963), by Anthony Burgess
- The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967), by William Styron
- The Corrections (2001), by Jonathan Franzen
- The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), by Thomas Pynchon
- A Dance to the Music of Time (1951), by Anthony Powell
- The Day of the Locust (1939), by Nathanael West
- Death Comes for the Archbishop (1927), by Willa Cather
- A Death in the Family (1958), by James Agee
- The Death of the Heart (1958), by Elizabeth Bowen
- Deliverance (1970), by James Dickey
- Dog Soldiers (1974), by Robert Stone
F - G
- Falconer (1977), by John Cheever
- The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969), by John Fowles
- The Golden Notebook (1962), by Doris Lessing
- Go Tell it on the Mountain (1953), by James Baldwin
- Gone With the Wind (1936), by Margaret Mitchell
- The Grapes of Wrath (1939), by John Steinbeck
- Gravity's Rainbow (1973), by Thomas Pynchon
- The Great Gatsby (1925), by F. Scott Fitzgerald
H - I
- A Handful of Dust (1934), by Evelyn Waugh
- The Heart is A Lonely Hunter (1940), by Carson McCullers
- The Heart of the Matter (1948), by Graham Greene
- Herzog (1964), by Saul Bellow
- Housekeeping (1981), by Marilynne Robinson
- A House for Mr. Biswas (1962), by V.S. Naipaul
- I, Claudius (1934), by Robert Graves
- Infinite Jest (1996), by David Foster Wallace
- Invisible Man (1952), by Ralph Ellison
L - N
- Light in August (1932), by William Faulkner
- The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe (1950), by C.S. Lewis
- Lolita (1955), by Vladimir Nabokov
- Lord of the Flies (1955), by William Golding
- The Lord of the Rings (1954), by J.R.R. Tolkien
- Loving (1945), by Henry Green
- Lucky Jim (1954), by Kingsley Amis
- The Man Who Loved Children (1940), by Christina Stead
- Midnight's Children (1981), by Salman Rushdie
- Money (1984), by Martin Amis
- The Moviegoer (1961), by Walker Percy
- Mrs. Dalloway (1925), by Virginia Woolf
- Naked Lunch (1959), by William Burroughs
- Native Son (1940), by Richard Wright
- Neuromancer (1984), by William Gibson
- Never Let Me Go (2005), by Kazuo Ishiguro
- 1984 (1948), by George Orwell
O - R
- On the Road (1957), by Jack Kerouac
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962), by Ken Kesey
- The Painted Bird (1965), by Jerzy Kosinski
- Pale Fire (1962), by Vladimir Nabokov
- A Passage to India (1924), by E.M. Forster
- Play It As It Lays (1970), by Joan Didion
- Portnoy's Complaint (1969), by Philip Roth
- Possession (1990), by A.S. Byatt
- The Power and the Glory (1939), by Graham Greene
- The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961), by Muriel Spark
- Rabbit, Run (1960), by John Updike
- Ragtime (1975), by E.L. Doctorow
- The Recognitions (1955), by William Gaddis
- Red Harvest (1929), by Dashiell Hammett
- Revolutionary Road (1961), by Richard Yates
S - T
- The Sheltering Sky (1949), by Paul Bowles
- Slaughterhouse Five (1969), by Kurt Vonnegut
- Snow Crash (1992), by Neal Stephenson
- The Sot-Weed Factor (1960), by John Barth
- The Sound and the Fury (1929), by William Faulkner
- The Sportswriter (1986), by Richard Ford
- The Spy Who Came in From the Cold (1964), by John le Carre
- The Sun Also Rises (1926), by Ernest Hemingway
- Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937), by Zora Neale Hurston
- Things Fall Apart (1959), by Chinua Achebe
- To Kill a Mockingbird (1960), by Harper Lee
- To the Lighthouse (1927), by Virginia Woolf
- Tropic of Cancer (1934), by Henry Miller
U - W
- Ubik (1969), by Philip K. Dick
- Under the Net (1954), by Iris Murdoch
- Under the Volcano (1947), by Malcolm Lowry
- Watchmen (1986), by Alan Moore & Dave Gibbons
- White Noise (1985), by Don DeLillo
- White Teeth (2000), by Zadie Smith
- Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), by Jean Rhys
ALL-TIME GRAPHIC NOVELS
- Berlin: City of Stones (2000), by Jason Lutes
- Blankets (2003), by Craig Thompson
- Bone (2004), by Jeff Smith
- The Boulevard of Broken Dreams (2002), by Kim Deitch
- The Dark Knight Returns (1986), by Frank Miller
- David Boring (2000), by Daniel Clowes
- Ed the Happy Clown (1989), by Chester Brown
- Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth (2000), by Chris Ware
- Palomar: The Heartbreak Soup Stories (2003), by Gilbert Hernandez
- Watchmen (1986), by Alan Moore & Dave Gibbons
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/completelist/0,29569,1951793,00.html#ixzz0g0NOENsX