It was roller coaster ride for the stocks in Asia esp. India, India was the worst performer in Asia region. Indian IT stocks already battered by the rising Rupee and the recession fears in the USA, IT was the worst performer of all the sectors When things were looking up a little then came the inflation data and the stocks were back to square one, worst is that the capital goods sector declined the most, putting even the IT stocks into shame. And my portfolio hit a negative territory dragged down by the IT and capital goods.
Well, what’s this background got do with the title? Look at any performance analysis, it’s just the growth over the pervious quarter, half or at best previous year. Analysts do not even want to recollect beyond this duration. A litter of cooking oil used to cost Rs 10 /- 20 years ago but now it costs 120/- over 1200 % increase but does anyone remember, NO, what an economist would say is the cooking oil has risen 5 % over the same period last year.. same is the case with performance of any company. The company might have grown CAGR of 40% in the last couple of years but will it grow CAGR of atleast 15% in this year? if the answer is NO, then sell.
From the analyst’s point of view, “Performance” is all about growth over the previous year, that is, statistically, current year’s data over previous year’s. If the growth of current year is exceptionally good then one can expect, next year’s to go down or at best, after a couple of years because the denominator keeps growing and the numerator in absolute terms may be same but in percentage terms it would be lesser. In other words the growth in absolute terms should grow more to keep up with the same percentage growth. This does not happen practically, for example, though IT industry had grown over 40% CAGR it cannot sustain further, if it have to it should grow over 10 billion USD in absolute terms which practically impossible given the infrastructure and human resource constraints, In sum, the denominator has grown so much that even same absolute growth is going to only show the performance in poor light.
From the analyst’s point of view, “Performance” is all about growth over the previous year, that is, statistically, current year’s data over previous year’s. If the growth of current year is exceptionally good then one can expect, next year’s to go down or at best, after a couple of years because the denominator keeps growing and the numerator in absolute terms may be same but in percentage terms it would be lesser. In other words the growth in absolute terms should grow more to keep up with the same percentage growth. This does not happen practically, for example, though IT industry had grown over 40% CAGR it cannot sustain further, if it have to it should grow over 10 billion USD in absolute terms which practically impossible given the infrastructure and human resource constraints, In sum, the denominator has grown so much that even same absolute growth is going to only show the performance in poor light.
The opposite is what matters to me, in times of slower growth, the rate scenario that today’s smaller Numerator will be tomorrow’s denominator and the analyst can see a bigger growth. And 3 -4 quarters of slower growth rate would be 3-4 quarters of higher growth next year. This is what keeping me invested with the hope that analysts will stick to the same analysis.
No comments:
Post a Comment