Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
December 2016
Ambit Client
Speculator
30%
R2 = 84%
D4
D2
D6
D3
20%
D7
D5
15%
D8
D9
200.0
250.0
300.0
10%
5%
0%
50.0 -5%
D10
-10%
25%
D1
Cash
Pilferage
Revenue
Manipulation
Expense
Manipulation
Nikhil Pillai
nikhil.pillai@ambit.co
Tel: +91 22 3043 3265
Strategy
CONTENTS
Beware the Zone of Darkness! .3
Executive summary 4
Our forensic model: Methodology ..8
Link between accounting quality and investment returns ..20
Why we think accounting quality especially merits 26
attention at this critical juncture
Debunking myths about accounting quality .29
How can clients access our forensic model? ........................31
Subjective checks: Can be gauged only with a careful ..33
reading of the annual report
Sample bespoke: Analysing top Indian auditors .37
Sample bespoke: Thousands of Miles ...38
Analysing top Indian auditors ..37
Thousands of Miles (NOT RATED): Too good to be true! ..38
Page 2
Strategy
THEMATIC
ACCOUNTING
Pg. no.
10
Biocon
11
Tata Chemicals
12
Linde India
12
Tanla Solutions
13
Godrej Consumer
13
UPL
14
Wockhardt
15
Balkrishna Inds.
16
Sequent Scientific
16
Unitech
17
33
Arshiya
34
Lanco Infra.
34
Crompton Greaves
35
38
37
'Zone of Safety'
'Zone of
Pain'
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
'Zone of
Darkness'
D8
D9
D10
Source: Ace Equity, Capitaline, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Accounting score is based on
annual financials over FY11-16; stock price performance is from November 2010 to November 2016
Research Analysts
Karan Khanna, CFA
+91 22 3043 3251
karan.khanna@ambit.co
Nitin Bhasin
+91 22 3043 3241
nitin.bhasin@ambit.co
Ambit Capital and / or its affiliates do and seek to do business including investment banking with companies covered in its research reports. As a result, investors should be aware that Ambit Capital
may have a conflict of interest that could affect the objectivity of this report. Investors should not consider this report as the only factor in making their investment decision.
Strategy
Executive summary
Over the past couple of decades, instances of alleged accounting
malpractices have become widely prevalent in India. Global Trust Bank,
Satyam and Reebok India remind one of some of the biggest accounting
malpractices that shook corporate India in recent times. Given poor
accounting quality is profoundly damaging for investment returns, forensic
accounting has become the cornerstone of Ambits investment philosophy
over the past several years. With FY16 annual reports out for nearly all the
major listed Indian companies, we bring to you this years edition of our
annual accounting thematic.
The accounting quality for India Inc. remains lower than the accounting quality for
most of its global peers. Global Trust Bank (2004; for more details click here for an
interesting article online), Satyam (2009; for more details click here for an interesting
article online) and, more recently, Reebok India (2012; for more details click here for
an interesting article online) are just a few examples of how accounting frauds have
shaken the Indian markets from time to time. Further, with nearly 80% of listed
Indian companies having failed to beat inflation over the last 20 years, the
importance of accounting quality cannot be overemphasised, although this is an area
that is often overlooked.
Before we continue with our discussion on why accounting quality matters, especially
in the Indian context, a look at some of the biggest accounting and financial
malpractices associated with India Inc. over the past two decades would be
worthwhile (see exhibit 1 below).
Exhibit 1: Key accounting and financial malpractices in India over the past two decades
Name of company Year and month Brief description
Alleged falsification of accounts/misappropriation of funds
Global Trust
Bank
2004
At the core of Global Trust Bank appears to be the issue of inappropriate exposure to capital market activities,
which resulted in huge NPAs, which in turn were significantly under-provisioned for by the bank. As a result,
the banks reported net worth of Rs4,004mn (as on 31 March 2002) eventually turned out to be negative when
inspected by the RBI.
Satyam Computers
Jan-09
Ramalinga Raju, Chairman of Satyam Computers, confessed to manipulating the books of accounts of the
company to the tune of more than Rs70bn.
DSQ Software
1998
DSQ and its promoter Mr. Dalmia allegedly made misleading statements "which had the effect of inducing
purchase of securities by public which in turn increased the market price of the shares of the company". Also,
Lovelock & Lewes- one of the member firms of PwC, and the auditors of DSQ Software, was found guilty of
manipulating share prices and falsification of accounts by SFIO.
Reebok India
Nov-12
Not only were sales allegedly exaggerated through parallel accounting and were never passed on to the
company, incidents of goods invoiced merely to inflate sales (but not dispatched), suspicious third party
transactions, circular trading, and retrospective increases in the price of good already sold, are all believed to
have been present in some form or the other.
Sep-14
In its annual report for 2013-14, United Spirit's auditors (M/s BSR & Co. belonging to the KPMG group) alleged
that the company had advanced certain amounts (amounting to Rs21bn) to a few UB group entities between
2010 to 2013 where there was no clarity on recovery. Both the previous auditors - PwC and Walker Chandiok
& Co. did not make note of this fund diversion in their auditors report.
Air India
2006-07
Citing one of the issues red flagged by the airline's statutory auditors in the 2006-07 annual report; one of the
former employees alleged that the Air India management dressed up the airlines balance sheet with
accounting loopholes and deception to inflate receivable rents (to the extent of Rs0.8bn) to make its losses
look smaller.
Ricoh India
May-16
KPMG, who was appointed as the statutory auditors of Ricoh India in Sep 15, identified several accounting
irregularities in its books; said it is difficult to form an opinion.
United Spirits
16 December, 2016
Page 4
Strategy
Name of company Year and month Brief description
Cases of auditors resigning/refusing to sign the accounts/'withdrawing' the auditor's report
Arshiya
Aug-09
In August 2009 (FY10), based on the company filings, PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC) expressed their
unwillingness to be reappointed as the auditors of Arshiya. Consequently, Arshiya changed its auditor in FY10
(August 2009) from PwC to MGB & Co.
Prithvi Information
Dec-11
VK Asthana & Co, auditors of Hyderabad based software outsourcer Prithvi Information Solutions Prithvi
Information Solutions (PISL) refused to sign the financial accounts of the company for 2010-11. VK Asthana was
also the fifth auditing firm the company had in the last three years after Patwari & Co, Ernst & Young,
PriceWaterhouseCoopers and Walker Chandiok & Co.
Financial
Technologies (now 63 Sep-13
Moons Technologies)
In Sep 13, Deloitte took the unprecedented step to withdraw its audit report on Financial Technologies for the
year ending 31 March 2013, stating that the companys standalone and consolidated results are not to be
relied upon.
Lanco Infra.
Sep-12
Whilst E&Y replaced PwC in FY11, E&Y and Brahmayya & Co were appointed as joint auditors. In FY12, E&Y
refused to be reappointed and highlighted several qualifications in the audit report.
2010/2013
Deloitte indicated unwillingness to audit Alstom in FY10 and PwC was appointed. However PwC too did not
seek re-appointment in FY13 and were subsequently replaced by a mid-sized accounting firm SN Dhawan &
Co.
Oct-13
In Oct '13, private equity investors General Atlantic (GA) and India Equity Partners (IEP) had dragged their
investee company Fourcee Infrastructure to court over charges of fraud and embezzlement and willful deceit
running into several hundreds of crores. These allegations surfaced after an audit of the books of accounts for
year ended March 2013 by BSR & Company, an affiliate of KPMG.
Lilliput Kidswear
Jun-14
In 2014, global private equity firm Bain Capital Partners LLC sued EY in a US court, claiming that the auditing
firm cost it roughly $60 million by advising it to invest in Lilliput Kidswear, the children's clothing company. EY
was also the statutory auditor of Lilliput.
Catmoss
Jan-13
In 2012-13, private equity investors SAIF Partners alleged that the company had mishandled funds to the tune
of Rs2bn (US$ 36.2mn) - half of which were investments secured from SAIF and the remaining raised as bank
loans.
Sahara
Aug-12
In Apr '08, Sahara India Real Estate Corporation (SIREC) and Sahara Housing Investment Corporation (SHIC)
began the process of inviting and collecting subscriptions from the general public. Over a span of 3 years these
companies collected ~Rs177bn from 30mn investors. The invitation to subscribe was in the form of Optionally
Fully Convertible Debentures. On investigation by SEBI, it concluded that SIREC and SHIC violated the
Companies Act by collecting money through optionally fully convertible unsecured debentures (OFCDs) and
ordered the company not to raise any further funds using these instruments. Further, in Aug '12, the SC
ordered the Sahara Group to return ~Rs240bn, plus 15% interest, to millions of investors, within three months.
Vishwapriya
Sep-15
R Subramaniam, also the founder of defunct store chain Subhiksha, was arrested in Sep '15 for allegedly
duping over 4,000 depositors in the Vishwapriya group of companies to the tune of Rs1.5bn
PACL
Jan-16
Earlier this year, the promoters of PACL were arrested by the CBI over allegations that the property company
cheated investors of Rs450bn (US$6.8 bn).
Ponzi Schemes
Given how widely prevalent instances of alleged accounting malpractices have been,
for an investor contemplating whether or not to invest funds in India, it only becomes
imperative to gauge the accounting quality of any company before investing.
Against that backdrop, five years ago we started out building our proprietary forensic
accounting model with the sole objective of helping investors navigate camouflaged
annual reports. Over the years, we have built from scratch and refined our now wellestablished forensic accounting model to help provide investors with a first-level
assessment of their portfolios health. In addition to this, through a plethora of
bespoke accounting projects, we helped several clients dig deeper into corporates
with glaring accounting issues that were masked using various accounting gimmicks.
Note that our bespoke projects are not just restricted to an analysis of the reported
annual accounts for the company, but also on extensive primary data checks, analysis
of relevant press articles on the firm and/or its promoters, comparison with peers,
and analysis of various statutory filings of the firm. To illustrate this, towards the end
of this note (see page 38) we have provided a forensic bespoke that we did on an
emerging IT Solutions provider earlier this year.
Further, we have always believed that the degree of conservativeness exercised by
the auditor/audit firm auditing the books of accounts is as much important as the
accounting quality of the underlying listed company itself. In that context, a sample
bespoke that we did on the top Indian auditors too has been attached towards the
end of the note (see page 37).
16 December, 2016
Page 5
Strategy
Accounting quality matters! (over long periods of time)
That accounting quality matters is a point we have often highlighted over the past few
years. Exhibit 2 below plots the long-term (six years to be precise; measured over Nov
10 - Nov 16) share price performance of the ten deciles created on the basis of our
accounting model.
Exhibit 2: Performance of accounting deciles over long periods of time
Median share price
performance (Nov '10 to
Nov '16)
30%
'Zone of Safety'
25%
'Zone of
Pain'
20%
15%
'Zone of
Darkness'
10%
5%
0%
-5%
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
-10%
Accounting score based deciles
Source: Ace Equity, Capitaline, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Accounting score is based on annual
financials over FY11-FY16; stock price performance is from November 2010 to November 2016. Shaded areas
denote the three zones on accounting quality. Universe for this exhibit is BSE500 (ex-financials).
From exhibit 2 above, we note that an analysis of deciles constructed on the basis of
accounting quality (quantified using our model) brings out the following interesting
observations:
The top 5 deciles on accounting do not seem to be materially different from each
other on investment performance (we label these deciles the Zone of Safety);
The next two deciles - D6 and D7 have been slight underperformers (and hence
we categorise them as the Zone of Pain); but
The bottom three deciles have been massive underperformers (and hence we
categorise this as the Zone of Darkness).
The key takeaway from exhibit 2 above is that beyond D7, i.e. in the Zone of
Darkness, the performance slumps dramatically, suggesting that this is the zone that
has to be avoided at all costs.
Exhibit 3: Performance of the accounting deciles over the last 12 months (for the
BSE500 universe)
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
-5%
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
-10%
-15%
-20%
Source: Bloomberg, Capitaline, Ambit Capital research. Note: Universe for this exhibit is the BSE500 (exfinancials) as of 31 October 2015. Price performance has been measured over the period 16 December 2015 to
14 December 2016.
16 December, 2016
Page 6
Strategy
In exhibit 4 below, we illustrate the performance over the same period for the subBSE500 universe. Note the sharp underperformance for the bottom three deciles on
accounting.
Gauging
accounting
quality
especially becomes crucial for the
less discovered space
Exhibit 4: Performance of the accounting deciles over the last 12 months (for the
sub-BSE500 universe)
15%
10%
5%
0%
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
-5%
-10%
-15%
Source: Bloomberg, Capitaline, Ambit Capital research. Note: Universe for this exhibit is the sub-BSE500 (exfinancials) as of 31 October 2015. Price performance has been measured over the period 16 December 2015 to
14 December 2016.
Exhibits 2, 3 and 4 above bring out a very interesting observation about accounting
quality in India. Thinking about accounting quality as just one of the many factors
affecting investment returns isnt appropriate. It is, in fact, a critical hygiene factor,
the lack of which can be seriously detrimental to portfolio returns.
Launching our proprietary accounting model for FY16
With FY16 annual reports out for nearly all the major listed Indian companies, this
note brings to you this years edition of our annual accounting thematic extended to
all companies with market-cap greater than Rs1,000mn.
In the next section, we will discuss the methodology used to rank the entire universe
of listed companies (excluding banks and financial services firms) with market-cap
greater than Rs1,000mn on the basis of their accounting quality. All our accounting
analysis is based on data sets taken from Ace Equity, Capitaline and Bloomberg. We
triangulate our data across three data sets to ensure that we minimise data-driven
errors in our analysis.
16 December, 2016
Page 7
Strategy
Pilferage checks
Ratios
Rationale
Cash yield
A low cash yield may either imply balance sheet misstatement or that
the cash is not being used in the best interests of the firm
Source: Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research. Note: *Depreciation accounting has undergone significant changes in FY15 (due to the requirements of the
Companies Act, 2013 that became applicable w.e.f. 01.04.2014). This has resulted in inherent volatility in the depreciation rate in FY15 across the universe.
However, given that we are looking at a 6-year median in our model, this change in depreciation accounting does not materially impact the scores for companies
in the universe.
16 December, 2016
Page 8
Strategy
Exhibit 6: 8K Miles - rising investment in working capital has led to a low score on
cumulative CFO/cumulative EBITDA
Particulars (Rs mn)
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
50
52
138
386
887
1,513
(84)
(120)
(66)
(548)
(817)
(34)
(69)
139
320
339
696
50
54
138
383
885
1,510
-67%
-126%
101%
84%
38%
46%
262
441
1,249
2,719
24%
68%
183%
118%
EBITDA*
CFO/EBITDA
Revenue
Revenue growth
211
FY16 Cumulative
Source: Company filings, Ambit Capital research. Note: *EBITDA excludes other income. CFO is pre-tax.
Exhibit 6 above also suggests the companys cash flows have been fairly volatile
over the years. This could partly be explained by its unstable working capital cycle
(see exhibit 7 below). Whilst 8K Miles has historically had a much longer working
capital cycle than its peers, it seems to have improved in FY15 (when the cash
conversion cycle improved to 55 days from 103 days in FY14). However, in FY16,
the companys working capital cycle again seems to have deteriorated (to 110
days). Further, even in FY15, when the working capital scenario appeared to be
improving, the company still lagged its peers.
Exhibit 7: 8K Miles cash conversion cycle is the highest among its peers
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
8K Miles
84
145
103
55
110
Take Solutions
30
51
65
85
68
Accelya Kale
59
46
33
40
49
28
43
47
21
28
23
24
16
MPS
Persistent Systems
eClerx
55
55
68
72
34
Peer Median
30
46
33
43
47
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: Following reclassification of reporting structure, 8K Miles has
been reporting zero payables since FY13.
16 December, 2016
Page 9
Strategy
Given the rising investment in its working capital and the volatile nature of its
cash flows, 8K Miles fares poorly on our accounting model on cumulative
CFO/cumulative EBITDA.
2
Depreciation rate
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
15.6%
8.8%
10.9%
6.6%
4.4%
680
212
433
214
Navin Fluo.Intl.
6.0%
5.7%
5.8%
5.2%
5.3%
25
58
Sequent Scien.
8.6%
9.5%
8.9%
7.7%
8.8%
92
65
119
108
Aarti Inds.
6.7%
8.0%
6.6%
5.2%
5.3%
125
139
135
Vinati Organics
4.2%
3.8%
4.3%
4.5%
4.1%
41
55
21
38
Atul
4.4%
4.6%
4.8%
4.7%
4.6%
24
16
10
41
55
58
10
639
157
375
204
One plausible reason for such major volatility in depreciation rate could be the
continuous additions to its gross block. However, if we see the gross block
breakup directionally, the depreciation rates should move up as the share of
buildings/premises (which attract a lower depreciation rate) has come down
whilst the share of plants and machinery (which attract a higher depreciation
rate) has moved up (see exhibit 9 below:)
Exhibit 9: Omkar Specialty Chemicals gross block breakup
Gross block
Goodwill
Freehold Land
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
6%
4%
4%
2%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
Buildings / Premises
22%
22%
20%
20%
20%
Plant& Machinery
59%
60%
60%
66%
68%
Leasehold Land
10%
12%
13%
8%
8%
3%
2%
2%
2%
2%
0%
0%
0%
2%
3%
Other Assets
0%
1%
1%
0%
0%
16 December, 2016
Page 10
Strategy
In Omkars case, the blended average depreciation rate has gone down from
~15.6% in FY12 to ~4.6% in FY16. Overall, given the volatility in its depreciation
rate as well as the directional trend in its depreciation rate; Omkar Speciality
Chemicals gets a low score on volatility in depreciation rate on our model.
3
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Biocon
2.6%
10.8%
1.9%
5.8%
22.0%
818
883
388
1,620
Glenmark Pharma
0.5%
0.2%
0.2%
0.3%
0.5%
24
14
14
Dr Reddy's Labs
0.6%
1.0%
1.0%
1.2%
1.4%
36
20
23
Cadila Health.
1.0%
0.6%
0.5%
0.5%
0.9%
39
12
41
Median (ex-Biocon)
0.6%
0.6%
0.5%
0.5%
0.9%
36
14
23
Divergence
2.0%
10.2%
1.5%
5.3%
21.1%
783
881
374
1,597
Source: Company filings, Ambit Capital research. Note: *This includes exceptional items
A low ratio, on the other hand, raises the spectre of earnings being boosted
through aggressive provisioning practices. We use a six-year median for this
measure and penalise firms where this ratio is abysmally low.
Note: We agree that in case of several companies, given their nature of business
operations, debtors more than six months are not material (vis--vis the size of
the business). Thus, in such cases, to avoid unduly penalising firms where debtors
more than six months are a small fraction of the consolidated revenues (our
threshold for this is 0.20% of consolidated revenues), we assign an average score
to the firm on this parameter.
16 December, 2016
Page 11
Strategy
Case study: Tata Chemicals (TTCH IN, US$ 1.8bn, Not Rated); Linde India
(LIIL IN, US$ 0.5bn, Not Rated)
Historically, Tata Chemicals debtors outstanding for more than six months (as a
percentage of gross debtors) have ranged from 15% to 25%, which is
substantially higher than that of its chemicals sector peers.
Further, for Linde India, the proportion of debtors outstanding for more than six
months has been much higher (having ranged from 45% to 60%).
However, in spite of the higher share of debtors more than six months, as a
percentage of gross debtors, the provisioning for old debtors (i.e. provisioning for
debtors as a percentage of debtors more than six months) is materially below that
of its peers for both these companies (see Exhibit 11 below):
Exhibit 11: Provisioning for old debtors - Tata Chemicals and Linde India vs peers
Company/metric
Tata Chemicals
FY16
9%
4%
5%
6%
12%
16%
25%
21%
18%
15%
Guj Alkalies
69%
67%
64%
73%
78%
7%
7%
7%
6%
5%
BASF India
87%
73%
74%
76%
83%
4%
4%
4%
4%
4%
Coromandel Inter
44%
30%
11%
26%
52%
2%
5%
20%
12%
8%
Atul
16%
32%
27%
47%
45%
2%
2%
2%
1%
2%
60%
Linde India
Median(ex-Tata Chemicals)
Divergence (Tata Chemicals vs peers)
Median(ex-Linde India)
Divergence (Linde India vs peers)
9%
10%
13%
7%
9%
44%
60%
60%
59%
44%
32%
27%
47%
52%
4%
5%
7%
6%
5%
-35%
-28%
-23%
-41%
-41%
12%
20%
14%
12%
10%
44%
32%
27%
47%
52%
4%
5%
7%
6%
5%
-35%
-22%
-15%
-40%
-43%
41%
55%
53%
53%
54%
A study of Tata Chemicals annual accounts for FY16 suggests provisioning for
old debtors has, in fact, increased from ~6% in FY15 to ~12% in FY16. Note,
however, that a look at the provisioning policies followed by its peers suggests
Tata Chemicals peers provisioning for old debtors stood at ~52% in FY16 and,
hence, Tata Chemicals FY16 provisioning is still quite low versus peers.
Had the companys provisioning for debts more than six months been in line with
that of its peers (i.e. 52%), consolidated PBT for FY16 would have been lower by
~17%.
In Linde Indias case, had the companys provisioning for debtors more than six
months been in line with that of its peers (i.e. 52%), the excess provisioning
required translates into ~9.1x FY16 profit before exceptional items and taxes.
Cash yield: Cash yield denotes the yield that is being earned on cash and
marketable investments.
With the risk free rate in India being closer to 6-8%, one would expect idle cash
and marketable investments to generate at least 5-6% returns. A low cash yield
could thus be a cause for concern as it could mean that either the balance sheet
has been mis-stated or cash is not being used in the best interests of the firm.
We calculate the cash yield for each of the last six years. We then sort the firms
on this ratio using the last six-year median such that companies with relatively
high cash yields get a high score while companies with lower cash yields get
penalised the most.
16 December, 2016
Page 12
Strategy
Case study: Tanla Solutions (TANS IN, US$ 0.1bn, Not Rated)
Historically, Tanla Solutions has been earning a significantly lower yield on cash
and marketable investments as compared to its peers.
Whilst its competitors such as Info Edge have been earning cash yields in the
range of 6-9%, Tanla Solutions has been earning much lower returns. In fact, in
FY16, the cash yield was as low as 1.1% (see exhibit 12 below):
Exhibit 12: Tanla Solutions investment income yield vs Info Edge
Company/metric
FY14
FY15
FY16
Average
Tanla Solutions
2.6%
3.4%
0.1%
1.1%
1.8%
Info Edge*
9.0%
6.4%
7.5%
6.8%
7.4%
Source: Company filings, Ambit Capital research. Note: *In FY13, detailed break up of proceeds from sale of
investments (current and non-current) is not available. Hence we have considered the total proceeds from sale of
investments in FY13.
As noted earlier, with risk free rate in India being closer to 7-8%, cash and liquid
investments would be expected to generate at least 5-6% yield. In Tanla
Solutions case, however, the cash yield has averaged a dismal 1.8% over the last
few years and, hence, raises red flags.
6
In order to penalise such firms that have historically taken direct knock-offs from
equity, we calculate the change in reserves (excluding share premium) on a YoY
basis and divide it by that years PAT excluding dividends. We then take a six-year
median of this ratio. A ratio of less than one indicates direct write-offs to equity
without routing these through the profit & loss (P&L) account and may indicate
aggressive accounting policies.
Case study: Godrej Consumer (GCPL IN, US$ 7.3bn, SELL)
Godrej Consumer is an example of a firm that has historically taken direct writeoffs from equity. Whilst these direct write-offs were in accordance with the
accounting treatment prescribed under various Court Schemes, they were not in
accordance with the generally accepted accounting practices in India.
For example, according to the Scheme of Amalgamation of the erstwhile GHPL
with the company sanctioned by the Bombay High Court, GCPL directly routes the
amortisation expense (of ~Rs527.50mn) pertaining to the Goodknight and HIT
brands through its General Reserve (instead of the P&L account). Similarly, in
accordance with various other Court Schemes, Godrej Consumer has taken
several other write-offs directly from its equity.
Had Godrej Consumer routed these expenses through the P&L, its restated
earnings would have been very different (as shown in the exhibit below).
Exhibit 13: Godrej Consumer - restated earnings if amortisation of Goodwill and Hit Brands as well as other direct
write-offs from equity were routed through the P&L
(Rs mn)
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
9,773
10,246
10,297
12,487
14,760
904
528
923
777
528
8,869
9,719
9,374
11,711
14,232
-9%
-5%
-9%
-6%
-4%
16 December, 2016
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Note that the company has always made appropriate disclosures in its notes to
accounts. We are highlighting Godrej Consumer as an example primarily to show
how a few changes in accounting policies as well as a few court approvals may
cause a significant change to the reported bottom-line.
In fact, the auditors of Godrej Consumer too have been highlighting this in the
audit report. For example, in the FY16 annual report, the auditors have made the
following comments:
We draw attention to Note 13(b) to the Consolidated Financial Statements
regarding the Scheme of Amalgamation of the erstwhile Godrej Household
Products Limited with the Company approved by The Honble High Court of
Judicature at Bombay, whereby an amount of Rs52.75 crore, for the year ended on
March 31, 2016, equivalent to the amortisation of the Goodknight and Hit Brands
is directly debited to the General Reserve Account instead of debiting the same to
the Statement of Profit and Loss as per the provisions of AS 26. The said accounting
treatment is in accordance with the accounting treatment prescribed in the Order
of the High Court of Mumbai dated February 28, 2011 under section 394 of the
Companies Act, 1956. Had this amount been charged to the Statement of Profit
and Loss, the profit for the year ended March 31, 2016 would have been lower by
Rs52.75 crore and the General Reserve would have been higher by Rs52.75 crore.
Our opinion is not modified in respect of this matter.
7
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
17%
13%
17%
18%
14%
3%
2%
2%
2%
1%
18%
16%
14%
14%
11%
1%
2%
2%
3%
2%
17%
8%
8%
6%
7%
Median (ex-UPL)
10%
5%
5%
4%
4%
7%
8%
12%
13%
10%
Source: Company filings, Ambit Capital research. Note: *Contingent Liabilities excluding LCs, Bills discounted and
capital commitments.
16 December, 2016
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Exhibit 15: UPLs contingent liabilities breakup (Rs mn)
Nature of contingent liability
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
2,111
2,345
2,252
2,281
2,679
335
335
335
335
335
2,524
2,524
2,524
2,524
2,524
428
13
3,024
4,727
3,356
361
416
469
220
244
1,215
533
212
142
456
67
68
6,975
6,167
8,816
10,298
9,662
Overall, given the relatively high proportion of contingent liabilities and the
nature of these liabilities, UPL gets penalised on contingent liabilities (as a
proportion of net worth) on our model.
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Median
Wockhardt
4.1%
5.3%
6.2%
8.2%
8.2%
6.2%
Dr Lal Pathlabs
2.2%
2.2%
2.1%
2.0%
2.3%
2.2%
Fortis Health.
0.2%
0.5%
0.7%
0.6%
0.4%
0.5%
Apollo Hospitals
0.2%
0.2%
0.2%
0.2%
0.2%
0.2%
Median (ex-Wockhardt)
0.2%
0.5%
0.7%
0.6%
0.4%
0.5%
Divergence
3.9%
4.9%
5.5%
7.6%
7.8%
5.7%
Source: Company filings, Ambit Capital research. Note: *Misc. expenses include Donation and CSR expenses.
Note that not only has this ratio been fairly high versus its peers, it has also been
increasing over time. Whilst sales for the company have only compounded at less
than 1% over the last four years, miscellaneous expenses have compounded at a
staggering 20% over the period.
Note further that this ratio was ~570bps higher versus its peers in FY16. In terms
of magnitude, it is worth highlighting that miscellaneous expenses were nearly
the same as Wockhardts PBT in FY15, and hence raises red flags.
16 December, 2016
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9
CWIP to gross block: The idea here is to penalise firms that show consistently
high CWIP relative to the gross block as this may either indicate unsubstantiated
capital expenditure or a delay in commissioning (which may in turn be motivated
by a delay in the recognition of the related depreciation expense). We calculate
the proportion of capital work in progress to gross block for each of the last six
years and then take the 25th percentile observation (instead of a simple six-year
median like in most other ratios).
The reason for using the 25th percentile over the last six years for this measure as
opposed to the median (which would be the 50th percentile observation) is to
allow the benefit of doubt to firms that have invested wisely during the ensuing
downturn. Hence, we are penalising companies only if the ratio has been
consistently high over most of the last six-year period.
Case study: Balkrishna Industries (BIL IN, US$ 1.7bn, SELL)
One firm that gets penalised on CWIP-gross block versus its peers is Balkrishna
Industries.
Whilst the companys CWIP relative to its gross block was broadly in line with that
of its peers in FY11, the ratio had remained at elevated levels over the last few
years until FY15. This seems to be on account of the capex incurred in connection
with its greenfield tyre project at Bhuj in Gujarat, which had only been partly
commissioned so far.
In its FY14 annual report, the company highlighted that this plant will be fully
commissioned by end-FY15. However, as can be seen in exhibit 17 below, this
does not appear to be the case (given its CWIP-gross block ratio still remained at
elevated levels in FY15). Note that in FY16 the company appears to have fully
commissioned the plant and, hence, the FY16 CWIP-gross block ratio is in-line
with its peers.
Exhibit 17: Balkrishna Industries capex analysis vs peers
Company/metric
CWIP*-Gross Block
FY-11
FY-12
FY-13
FY-14
FY-15
FY-16
Balkrishna Inds
0.15
0.55
0.67
0.23
0.21
0.08
Apollo Tyres
0.07
0.05
0.05
0.01
0.03
0.16
MRF#
0.30
0.09
0.08
0.12
N/A
0.14
JK Tyre
0.06
0.22
0.02
0.04
0.17
0.02
Ceat
0.07
0.01
0.01
0.04
0.11
0.11
Median (ex-Balkrishna)
0.07
0.07
0.03
0.04
0.11
0.13
Divergence (Balkrishna)
0.08
0.48
0.64
0.19
0.10
(0.05)
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: Note: *CWIP includes Capital Advances. #N/A since MRF has
changes its year end.
10 Cumulative CFO plus CFI to median revenues: We calculate the cumulative Our model penalises firms that
CFO (cash flow from operations) plus cumulative CFI (cash flow from investing have not generated positive free
activities) over the last six years. Next, we divide this by the last six-year median cash flows even on a six-year basis
revenues for the company to normalise it for the size of a company. The higher
the ratio, the better our perception of the companys accounts.
The idea is to penalise firms which over such long periods have been unable to
either generate positive cash flows from operations or alternatively where cash
flow from investments have consistently eaten away the cash generated from
operations.
Case study: Sequent Scientific (SEQ IN, US$ 0.4bn, Not Rated)
An analysis of Sequent Scientifics asset turns suggests the companys gross block
turnover has historically remained significantly below its peers. In spite of the
lower gross block turnover (suggesting inefficiencies in sweating the assets),
Sequent Scientifics cumulative CFI over the last five years has consistently eaten
away the cash generated from operations, raising questions regarding the
wisdom of the capex (see exhibits 18 and 19 below).
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Exhibit 18: In spite of the lowest gross block turnover vs
its peers
Company/metric
FY15
FY16
Sequent Scien.
1.2
1.0
1.1
Omkar Spl.Chem.
2.1
1.6
2.0
Navin Fluo.Intl.
1.2
1.4
1.4
Aarti Inds.
1.9
1.8
1.5
Vinati Organics
2.0
2.0
1.4
Atul
2.0
2.1
1.8
Median (ex-Sequent)
2.0
1.8
1.5
(0.8)
(0.8)
(0.4)
Divergence
Company/metric
(FY14-FY16)
(FY14-FY16)
(FY14-FY16)
(6,189)
4,432
(1.40)
(233)
2,651
(0.09)
755
5,915
0.13
Aarti Inds.
1,876
27,796
0.07
Atul
2,421
26,014
0.09
Vinati Organics
2,768
6,961
Sequent Scien.
Omkar Spl.Chem.
Navin Fluo.Intl.
Median (ex-Sequent)
0.40
0.09
Divergence
(1.49)
Given the negative free cash flows on a cumulative basis over the past few years,
Sequent Scientific gets a low score on free cash flows to median revenues on our
model.
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Exhibit 20: Unitech - auditors remuneration vis--vis peers
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Unitech
Consolidated Net Sales (Rs mn)
24,405
29,534
34,312
20,075
38.5
46.2
44.7
42.7
24.3
27.7
27.2
27.3
0.16
0.16
0.13
0.21
0.10
0.09
0.08
0.14
18,645
21,734
24,406
18,651
9.4
10.1
11.6
13.5
Sobha
Consolidated Net Sales (Rs mn)
Consolidated auditors remuneration (Rs mn)
Standalone auditors remuneration (Rs mn)
8.9
9.2
10.7
12.2
0.05
0.05
0.05
0.07
0.05
0.04
0.04
0.07
10,476
7,985
9,227
14,081
8.4
8.9
9.1
10.0
4.7
5.0
5.0
5.1
0.08
0.11
0.10
0.07
0.04
0.06
0.05
0.04
20,775
16,231
14,311
16,678
6.4
6.1
4.8
4.8
Oberoi Realty
Consolidated Net Sales (Rs mn)
Omaxe
Consolidated Net Sales (Rs mn)
Consolidated auditors remuneration (Rs mn)
Standalone auditors remuneration (Rs mn)
4.5
4.4
3.4
3.4
0.03
0.04
0.03
0.03
0.02
0.03
0.02
0.02
16 December, 2016
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Cumulating scores: We first assign scores to all the firms in the universe on each of
the 11 parameters discussed above. Next, we cumulate the scores across the 11
parameters to arrive at the final blended accounting score for each firm.
Based on these parameters, we rank 411 BSE500 firms and 893 sub-BSE500 firms on
accounting quality in this years forensic exercise. Note that from the sub-BSE500
universe, four firms have been included in the BSE500 screen given the sheer size of
these companies (see Table 1 on the right). As with all our forensic checks, from the
BSE500 universe, we have excluded 72 banks and financial services firms. A further
17 firms have been excluded due to sketchy data availability, corporate restructuring
and limited listed history.
Company Name
Ticker
Cairn India
CAIR IN
L & T Infotech
LTI IN
Mahanagar Gas
MAHGL IN
Sundaram Clayton
SDC IN
Note that five firms have been included based on their financials over FY10-FY15 as
their FY16 annual reports had not been published at the time of running this exercise
(see Table 2 on the right). Further, six firms have been included based on their
standalone financials as their consolidated financials would include the results of
their financial arm and hence would not have been comparable with the rest of the
universe (see Table 3 on the right).
Just like last year, we have extended this years forensic accounting exercise
to include all firms with a market-cap above Rs1,000mn. The exhibits and
discussion that you find in the subsequent sections, however, are only for the
BSE500 universe (excluding financial services firms).
Ticker
Fiscal Year
End
Siemens
SIEM IN
Sept.
Jet Airways
JETIN IN
Mar.
SpiceJet
SJET IN
Mar.
HMT
HMT IN
Mar.
Mar.
Data sources: We have used Ace Equity and Capitaline as data sources for the
underlying financial data whilst stock price data has been sourced from Bloomberg.
We had to use Ace Equity for some data items and Capitaline for some others in
order to minimise data errors. Unfortunately, neither of these databases (nor any
other database in India) is entirely reliable by itself.
Please note, however, that several adjustments need to be made to each of the
individual variables which we have not detailed here. For further details on these
adjustments, kindly email the authors of this note.
Ticker
ABNL IN
Ashok Leyland
AL IN
LT IN
M&M
MM IN
PTC India
PTCIN IN
Tube Investments
TI IN
16 December, 2016
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quality
and
In this section of the note, we seek to answer the following question: Does
accounting quality, as measured by our model, have any link with stock
market performance? To answer this, we assess the link between the
blended accounting score for the BE500 ex-financials universe, derived using
the methodology discussed above (i.e. using six years of consolidated
financials), and the share price performance over the last six years (i.e. Nov
2010 to Nov 2016). We note the following key takeaways from our analysis:
Universe level
At the universe level (i.e. BSE500), we do not find any significant relationship
between accounting quality and share price performance. This could partly be
explained by the fact that at the stock level, there are several other factors that
influence share price returns (such as the underlying fundamental performance of the
company, company-specific and industry-specific factors and so on).
Exhibit 21: Scatter plot does not reflect any significant relationship between
accounting scores and share price performance for the BSE500 stocks
140%
120%
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
-20% 50
-40%
-60%
R = 9%
100
150
200
250
300
Accounting score
Source: Bloomberg, Ace Equity, Capitaline, Ambit Capital research. Note: Accounting score is based on annual
financials over FY11-FY16; stock price performance is from November 2010 to November 2016 on a CAGR
basis. Universe for this exhibit is BSE500 (ex-financials).
Decile level
To control the noise around individual stocks, we now construct deciles on the basis
of accounting scores for the companies. A decile-level analysis is revealing and
demonstrates the power of accounting quality in shaping investment returns.
An R-squared of ~84% suggests that accounting quality is a significant driver of stock
returns.
16 December, 2016
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Exhibit 22: Decile-level analysis, however, reveals the strong link between accounting
quality and share price performance
30%
R = 84%
25%
D1
D4
20%
D5
D7
15%
D8
10%
5%
D2
D3
D6
D9
0%
-5%150.0
D10
-10%
200.0
250.0
300.0
In terms of individual decile performances, the first decile (D1) has delivered stock
price returns of 24% CAGR since November 2010. In contrast, the last decile (D10)
has delivered returns of -4% CAGR over this period, thus implying a 28% CAGR
outperformance for D1 vs D10. The performance differential across deciles becomes
more evident from the exhibit below.
Exhibit 23: Decile-level analysis suggests accounting quality is important
30%
'Zone of Safety'
25%
'Zone of
Pain'
20%
15%
'Zone of
Darkness'
10%
5%
0%
-5%
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
-10%
Accounting score based deciles
Source: Ace Equity, Capitaline, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Accouting score is based on annual
financials over FY11-16; stock price performance is from November 2010 to November 2016. Shaded areas
denote the three zones on accounting quality. Universe for this exhibit is BSE500 (ex-financials).
The most crucial takeaway from the above exhibit is that the market can be divided
into three different Zones on accounting quality on the basis of investment
performance the Zone of Safety, the Zone of Pain and the Zone of Darkness.
The top 5 deciles on accounting do not seem to be materially different from each
other on investment performance and hence we label it the Zone of Safety. The
performance drops in the next two deciles (D6 and D7), suggesting that such stocks
need to be scrutinised carefully to deliver investment performance and hence such
stocks can be categorised as the Zone of Pain. Beyond D7, however, the
performance slumps significantly, suggesting that this is the Zone of Darkness, one
to be avoided at all costs.
Exhibit 23 above therefore suggests that thinking about accounting quality as just one
of the many factors affecting investment returns isnt appropriate. It is, in fact, a
critical hygiene factor, the lack of which can be seriously detrimental to portfolio
returns.
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Sector-agnostic buckets
One may argue that in the decile construction above, sector effects have not been
nullified and some sectors may do better than others on our accounting model by
virtue of the nature of their businesses. The decile performances thus might reflect
serendipitous sector effects. To control the sector effects, we now construct four
sector-agnostic buckets such that bucket A comprises the first quartile of each sector
on accounting scores, bucket B comprises the second quartile of each sector, bucket
C comprises the third quartile of each sector and bucket D comprises the last
quartile of each sector. Hence, every bucket has an equal number of stocks from
each sector, implying that the buckets are sector-agnostic.
Each bucket in this case will have similar sectoral compositions and, hence, a
performance assessment of these buckets should enable one to assess the impact of
accounting quality on stock price performance in a sector-agnostic manner. Exhibit 24
below displays these four buckets with their respective stock price performances.
Clearly, the performance differential points to a strong link between accounting
quality and stock price performances even after controlling for sector effects.
Exhibit 24: Strong link between accounting quality and stock performance even after
controlling for sector effects
20%
252, 15.4%
15%
222, 12.8%
202, 10.5%
10%
175, 6.4%
5%
Bucket A
Bucket B
Bucket C
Bucket D
The above exhibit again highlights the importance of avoiding the lowest quality firms
on accounting quality regardless of how cheap they are.
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
Sector level
Next, arranging the BSE500 firms into sectors and assessing the link between the
average accounting scores of these sectors and the average stock price performance
of their constituent stocks suggest that accounting quality makes a difference at the
sector level as well (i.e. sectors with higher accounting quality, such as Consumer
Discretionary, Home Building and Consumer Durable perform better than sectors
with poor accounting quality such as E&C, Utilities and Realty).
Exhibit 25: At a sector level, link between accounting quality and stock price performance is relatively modest
60%
R = 28%
Cons. Disc.
50%
40%
30%
Textiles
20%
10%
0%
150
-10%
Pharma
IT
Healthcare Agri Inputs
FMCG
Cement
Misc.
Srvcs.
Auto
Light Engg.
Retail
E&C
Conglomerate
Infra.
Media
Oil & Gas
Heavy Engg.
Travel &
Telecom
Metals & Leisure
170 Realty
190 Mining
210
230
Aviation
Utilities
Sugar
Shipping
-20%
Home Building
250
270
Source: Bloomberg, Ace Equity, Capitaline, Ambit Capital research. Note: Accounting score is based on annual financials over FY11-16; stock price performance is
from November 2010 to November 2016 on a CAGR basis. Universe for this exhibit is BSE500 (ex-financials).
With a median score of 247, the Home Buildings sector is amongst the best
sectors in our accounting model. The sector has generated median stock price
returns of 27% CAGR over the last six-year period (Nov 10 to Nov 16). On the
other hand, Utilities is amongst the worst sectors on accounting on our model
with a median score of 184. The median stock price performance in the sector
has been -8% CAGR over the last six-year period.
Also, stocks within the same sector exhibit a significant link between accounting
scores and stock price returns in many cases. Three sectors which show strong
links are Media, Heavy Engineering and Infrastructure.
Exhibit 26: Within the sector, the link between accounting and price performance for
the Media sector
40%
R = 28%
30%
20%
10%
0%
-10%
50
100
150
200
250
300
-20%
-30%
Accounting score
Source: Ace Equity, Capitaline, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Accounting score is based on annual
financials over FY11-FY16; stock price performance is from November 2010 to November 2016 on a CAGR
basis. Universe for this exhibit is stocks from the Media sector in the BSE500 index.
16 December, 2016
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Exhibit 27: Within the sector, the link between accounting and price performance for
the Heavy Engineering sector
30%
R = 42%
20%
10%
0%
-10%
50
100
150
200
250
300
-20%
-30%
-40%
Accounting score
Source: Ace Equity, Capitaline, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Accounting score is based on annual
financials over FY11-FY16; stock price performance is from November 2010 to November 2016 on a CAGR
basis. Universe for this exhibit is stocks from the Heavy Engineering sector in the BSE500 index.
Exhibit 28: Within the sector, link between accounting and price performance for the
Infrastructure sector
R = 21%
30%
20%
10%
0%
-10%
50
100
150
200
250
300
-20%
-30%
-40%
Accounting score
Source: Ace Equity, Capitaline, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Accounting score is based on annual
financials over FY11-FY16; stock price performance is from November 2010 to November 2016 on a CAGR
basis. Universe for this exhibit is stocks from the Infrastructure sector in the BSE500 index.
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Size buckets
Finally, to address the size dimension, we split our universe of stocks into four sizes of
buckets as shown below. Bucket 1 comprises the largest 50 stocks in terms of market- Accounting quality is better for
cap, Bucket 2, the next 100, Bucket 3, the next 100 and Bucket 4, the lowest 161 larger caps on an average
stocks in terms of market-cap (thus, taking the total to 411 firms).
Exhibit 29: Larger capitalisation firms have better accounting scores on average
Number of
firms
Bucket
in the bucket
Average
accounting score
Average share
price
performance
% stocks in 'Zone of
darkness'
top 50
Bucket 1
Rs 360bn- Rs 4187bn
US$ 5.3bn-US$62bn
216
13.2%
28%
next 100
Bucket 2
Rs 82bn- Rs 348bn
US$ 1.2bn-US$5.1bn
221
18.8%
21%
next 100
Bucket 3
Rs 37bn- Rs 82bn
US$ 0.55bn-US$1.2bn
212
15.5%
26%
bottom 161
Bucket 4
Rs 3.7bn- Rs 36.9bn
US$ 0.05bn-US$0.55bn
204
11.7%
39%
Source: Ace Equity, Capitaline, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Accounting score is based on annual financials over FY11-16; stock price performance is
from November 2010 to November 2016 (on a CAGR basis). Universe for this exhibit is BSE500.
As one would expect, we find that the average accounting score as well as the stock
price performance varies directly with market cap, i.e. the larger market-cap buckets
(i.e. Buckets 1 and 2) have better accounting scores as well as better stock price
performance whilst the smallest market-cap bucket has the worst accounting score as
well as the worst stock price performance.
Further, the proportion of stocks in the Zone of Darkness (i.e. stocks that fall in D8,
D9 and D10) too varies with market cap. Whilst 28% of firms belonging to the largest
market cap bucket fall in the Zone of Darkness, ~39% of the firms belonging to the
smallest market cap bucket fall in this zone.
Delving further into the stocks that fall in Bucket 4 of market cap, we note that ~35%
of these names also fall in Bucket D discussed earlier (i.e. the bottom quartile stocks
from each sector). In contrast, the remaining ~65% stocks are evenly distributed
amongst Buckets A to C (see Exhibit 30 below). This suggests that a significant
proportion of firms from Bucket 4 on market cap, also fall in the bottom quartile on
accounting quality in their respective sectors.
Exhibit 30: Distribution of the smallest market-cap firms across the four accounting
quality buckets
Number of
firms
36
22%
Bucket B
36
22%
Bucket C
33
20%
56
35%
161
100%
Total
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research. Universe for this exhibit is BSE500 (ex-financials).
16 December, 2016
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Amtek Auto
Aug-16
Jun-16
Apr-16
Feb-16
Dec-15
Oct-15
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
Feb-15
400
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
-
Sensex
Source: Company, Press articles, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Amtek Auto share price as well as
Sensex have been rebased to 100 at the beginning of 2014
The following exhibit provides a brief snapshot of Amtek Auto on our HAWK
platform:
Exhibit 32: Amtek Autos forensic and greatness score evolution using HAWK
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Case study: Arshiya
Arshiya is another example of a company where our research team had highlighted
several accounting irregularities. Exhibit 33 below provides a snapshot of the key
accounting concerns raised by our Head of Research Nitin Bhasin (see our
25 February 2014 report: How Accounting, Politics and Capital Allocation Drive Alpha
in India).
Exhibit 33: Arshiyas accounting practices vs peers
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research. Note: This exhibit has been reproduced without any changes from our 25 February 2014 report: How Accounting,
Politics and Capital Allocation Drive Alpha in India
16 December, 2016
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In Jan 2013, certain employees of the company alleged financial irregularities in the company
and non-payment of salaries to the staff since Sep 2014. Since then, Arshiyas shares have
corrected by ~75% (see Exhibit 34 below):
Exhibit 34: Arshiyas share price performance vs peers and Sensex
600
Ambit's forensic
bespoke on the
Employees allege
company
financial irregularities;
non-payment of salaries
to staff since Sep
500
400
300
200
100
Arshiya
Gateway Distriparks
Aug-16
Apr-16
Dec-15
Aug-15
Apr-15
Dec-14
Aug-14
Apr-14
Dec-13
Aug-13
Apr-13
Dec-12
Aug-12
Apr-12
Dec-11
Aug-11
Apr-11
Dec-10
Aug-10
Apr-10
Dec-09
Aug-09
Apr-09
Dec-08
Sensex
Source: Company, Press articles, Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research; Note: Arshiya and Gateway Distriparks
share price as well as Sensex have been rebased to 100 at the beginning of 2009
The following exhibit provides a brief snapshot of Arshiya on our HAWK platform:
Exhibit 35: Arshiyas forensic and greatness score evolution using HAWK
Whilst we agree that it requires a lot of time for these accounting issues to
materialise, when they do, the events tend to be a binary event for the stock price.
Having discussed the crucial role that accounting quality plays in shaping investment
returns, we now move to a discussion on popular myths about accounting quality.
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
R = 0%
120.0
R = 3%
120.0
100.0
100.0
FY17 P/E
Trailing P/E
80.0
60.0
80.0
60.0
40.0
40.0
20.0
20.0
50
150
250
50
Accounting score
150
250
Accounting score
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: Trailing P/E has been
restricted to 100. Universe for this exhibit is BSE500 (ex-financials).
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: Forward P/E has been
restricted to 100. Universe for this exhibit is BSE500 (ex-financials).
16 December, 2016
Accounting
quality
remained
relevant even in the most recent
uptrend
Page 29
Strategy
Exhibit 38: Accounting quality stayed relevant even in the most recent uptrend (CY14)
75%
60%
45%
30%
15%
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
Source: Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research. Note: Price performance has been measured over the period 21
November 2013 to 19 December 2014.
A look at the Nifty (ex-financials) universe suggests as many as 46% of Nifty firms (i.e.
19 firms) have accounting scores below the universe (BSE500) average. Further, for
the weakest 19 of these firms, the accounting scores are actually so low that these
firms fall in the bottom three deciles of accounting quality for the BSE500. In other
words, 12 Nifty firms feature in the Zone of Darkness on our model.
Myth #4: In sectors such as E&C, Utilities and Heavy Engineering, weak
accounting quality is a certainty
Exhibit 25 on page 23 above suggests that for sectors such as E&C, Utilities and
Heavy Engineering, weak accounting quality is a given.
Within these sectors, however, several firms such as Bharat Electronics, Techno
Electric and Thermax have accounting scores that are far superior to the market
average.
Myth #5: It takes too much time and effort to assess accounting quality for a
firm
Contrary to popular belief, it does not take too much time and effort to assess
accounting quality for a firm. As we will discuss in the next section, there are several
ways in which interested clients can use our forensic model, not just to assess the
first-level health of their portfolio but also to screen the entire spectrum of listed
companies ex-financials (with market-cap greater than Rs1,000mn) on the basis of
their accounting quality.
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
Our HAWK platform allows clients to screen the entire universe ex-financials
(~1,300 listed Indian companies) on the basis of their accounting quality (quantified
using our forensic model) and capital allocation track record (quantified using our
greatness framework) over the last ten years. Whilst the platform currently has the
accounting scores for all the companies updated until FY15, in a couple of weeks
from now, we will refresh our platform to incorporate FY16 financials as well.
As an example, the following exhibit illustrates how clients can use our HAWK
platform to identify the more conservative or the more aggressive sectors both on
capital allocation as well as the quality of financial reporting.
Exhibit 39: Sector level heatmap analysis using HAWK
Source: Ambit HAWK, Ambit Capital research. Note: Each block represents a sector block size represents either free float or market cap, block color represents
either forensic score or greatness score. Clients can use the toggle buttons to switch the representations. Click on any sector to see the constituent stocks this also
changes current selection to all stocks in that sector. The other charts update automatically. Data for the above exhibit pertains to FY10-15.
Please contact your relevant sales representatives at Ambit if you have not yet
received the login credentials for HAWK or if you would like a demo on how to use
the product.
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
Portfolio heatmaps
We can give interested clients an accounting heatmap of their portfolio within five
working days of receiving it if the constituent stocks are in our accounting model. This
will enable clients to identify if any of their holdings are in the Zone of Darkness. A
sample screenshot of what such a diagnostic looks like is presented below.
Ambit sector
CFOEBITDA
Cont
|Liab-%
of NW
Change
in depr
rate
CAGR in
Vol. in
Misc.
auditors remn
NoI (as a
exps-% of
to CAGR in
% of sales)
total revs
consol revs
Cash
yield
PFD-% of
Change in
Cum. FCF/
debtors
reserves/
median
more than
(PAT ex
revs
six months
dividend)
Overall
Score
ABC
Industrials
11
12
13
13
13
11
9.2
XYZ
Utilities
13
12
12
7.8
PPP
Utilities
10
11
11
7.1
RRR
IT
10
12
10
10
7.0
DEF
Metals
12
10
13
6.5
GHI
Metals
10
12
12
6.4
TTT
11
10
5.1
PQR
13
3.9
Note: ORANGE denotes sub-par accounting quality relative to the sector average; Red denotes that the stock falls in the Zone of Darkness
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
Glenmark Pharma is an example of a firm where the proportion of assets not audited
by the statutory auditor is fairly high.
(Note: Glenmark Pharma falls in the D7 in the BSE500 universe on our accounting
model).
Case study: Glenmark Pharma (GNP IN, US$ US$ 3.8bn, Not Rated)
A relevant extract from Glenmark Pharmas FY16 auditors report has been presented
in Exhibit 41 below:
Exhibit 41: Glenmark Pharma - extract from its FY16 auditors report (Pgs. 195 and
196 of the annual report)
Exhibit 41 above suggests that the auditors have not audited total assets to the tune
of ~Rs53bn but have relied on the statement furnished by the other auditors. In
percentage terms, this translates into ~53% of Glenmark Pharmas FY16
consolidated assets.
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
Subjective check #2 Frequent changes in the auditor
Investors should keep an eye out for frequent changes in the statutory auditor as this
could imply frequent disagreements between the auditor and the management,
which eventually results in the auditor leaving.
This can be better understood by looking at the changes in Arshiyas auditor in FY10.
(Note: Arshiya falls in D10 of the sub-BSE500 universe on our accounting model).
Case study: Arshiya (ARSL IN, US$ 0.1bn, Not Rated)
In August 2009 (FY10), based on company filings, PwC expressed unwillingness to be
reappointed as auditors of Arshiya (see Exhibit 42 below).
Exhibit 42: Extract of Arshiyas BSE filings (from Aug 09)
Consequently, Arshiya changed its auditor in FY10 (August 2009) from PwC to MGB
& Co. MGB & Co. in India is a member firm of MGI International, which is
headquartered in London, UK, since 1947. MGB & Co. also audits the accounts of
Zee Group and Welspun Corp (a flagship company of the Welspun Group).
This can be better understood by looking at the issues raised by Lanco Infratechs
auditors, PwC, in the auditors report in FY07 and FY08.
(Note: Lanco Infratech falls in the D9 of the sub-BSE500 universe on our accounting
model).
Case study: Lanco Infratech (LANCI IN, US$ 0.1bn, Not Rated)
In FY07, the auditors of Lanco Infra had raised the following issues with respect to the
consolidated financial statements:
Profits were higher by Rs169.29mn (or 9% of consolidated profits for FY07) due
to non-elimination of intra-group transactions and unrealised profits pending
clarification from ICAI.
Not only did the company not meet the requirements of AS-21 on the consolidated
financial statements (given that according to AS-21 issued by the ICAI, consolidation
should have been carried out from 15 November 2006, the date on which holding
subsidiary relationship came into existence), the above treatment resulted in the
profits for FY07 being higher by Rs412.23mn (or 22% of consolidated profits for that
year).
The excess profit of Rs412.23mn, which was recognised in the P&L account of Lanco
Infra in FY07, had to be reversed in FY08. According to the generally accepted
accounting principles, such a reversal should have been made against current-year
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
profits (i.e. FY08 profits in this case) as a prior-period adjustment. Lanco Infra instead
chose to adjust these excess profits against the balance of profit brought forward
from the previous year. Consequently, the correction to FY08 profits was not made as
required. The auditors too had raised their issues on such a treatment in their report
on the consolidated financial statements for FY08.
Issues raised by Lancos auditors in FY07 Annual Report (on Page 63)
Attention is drawn to the following:
As detailed in note 4(xvi) of Schedule 19, pending clarification from the ICAI on
non-elimination of intra group transactions and unrealised profits arising out of
construction of projects under Build Operate Own and Transfer basis, the Company
has not eliminated revenues and unrealised profits in the consolidated financial
statements. As a result the consolidated revenue and net profit after minority
interest are higher by Rs1692.97 millions and Rs169.29 millions respectively.
M/s Lanco Kondapalli Power Private Limited (LKPPL) has become a subsidiary of
the Company with effect from November 15, 2006. However the consolidated
financial statements have been presented considering LKPPL as a subsidiary with
effect from April 01, 2006. As a result the consolidated revenues and net profit
after minority interest are higher by Rs3270.90 and Rs242.94 millions
respectively.
Issues raised by Lancos auditors in FY08 Annual Report (on Page 71)
Attention is drawn to Note 4.viii on Schedule 19 to the consolidated financial
statements regarding the adjustment of excess profits recognised in the previous year
aggregating to Rs412.23 million against the balance of profit brought forward from
the previous year, which in our opinion and according to the generally accepted
accounting principles in India should have been adjusted against the current years
profit as a prior period adjustment. Consequently the net profit after tax and minority
interest for the current year has been overstated by the above amount.
Suspicious
related
party
transactions would merit further
attention
Parties would be considered related if at any time during the financial year, one
party is able to either control the other party or can exercise significant influence over
the other. Thus, related parties would include subsidiaries, associates, joint ventures,
key management personnel and their relatives etc. Ideally, transactions between
related parties should be at arms length. An arms length transaction would mean
that both the parties seek to execute the transaction in their best interests. However,
in several cases, related-party transactions are conducted in a manner that is not in
the best interests of one party. Overpaying for an asset purchased from a related
party, sale of goods or other assets to related parties at a significant discount to their
fair market values, loans given to related parties at exceptionally concessional rates
or loans taken from related parties at exorbitant interest rates are just a few
examples of how these transactions might not be in the best interests of the minority
shareholders. Likewise, unwarranted transactions with related parties should raise a
red flag.
This point can be better understood by analysing certain related-party transactions
that Crompton Greaves has undertaken over the last few years.
(Note: Crompton Greaves does not feature in our accounting model due to corporate
actions).
16 December, 2016
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Strategy
Case study: Crompton Greaves (CRG IN, US$ 0.6bn, Not Rated)
In FY08, Crompton Greaves purchased co-ownership rights in an aircraft from a
related party, M/s Asia Aviation Ltd, for Rs562.5mn. Mr. Gautam Thapar, MD & CEO
of Crompton Greaves, was also a director of M/s Asia Aviation Ltd, a company in the
business of providing air charter services.
Whilst it is arguable that the aircraft purchase was unwarranted, the fact that it had
been executed with a related party in the business of providing aircrafts on a lease
basis also raises concerns regarding the appropriateness of such a transaction, given
that Crompton Greaves could have simply hired the aircraft.
This transaction was followed by the purchase of another aircraft during FY11 for
Rs2700mn. However, no disclosures were made by the company in its annual report
for FY11 as to whether or not this was a related-party transaction. When these issues
were raised by investors with the management in 2QFY12, the management
transferred the entire block of aircrafts at book value to its unlisted related parties,
M/s Asia Aviation Ltd (Rs411.7mn) and M/s Avantha Holdings Ltd (Rs2,405mn). This
last point can be detected from the FY12 annual report.
The nature of these subjective checks further augments the need for an indepth bespoke analysis
Given the nature of the subjective assessments on corporate governance discussed
above, the need for a detailed investigative bottom-up company-specific bespoke
analysis only becomes much more imperative for an investor.
Against that backdrop, in the final section of the note, we look into our forensic
bespoke knowledge bank and dig out two of the most interesting bespokes that we
did during the year. Whilst one of the bespokes pertains to an emerging IT Solutions
provider the other bespoke pertains to the top audit firms in India where we have
evaluated these firms on the basis of the accounting quality of their auditee firms.
16 December, 2016
Page 36
Median Forensic
deciles for the top
10 auditee
firms# (2016)
Median Forensic
deciles for the
top 10 auditee
firms# (2015)
37%
D6
D6
KPMG group
12%
D6
D4
EY group
12%
D6
D3
7%
D8
D8
4%
D8
D6
3%
D7
D7
3%
D9
D6
Lodha & Co
2%
D7
D7
Haribhakti & Co
1%
D10
D9
1%
D8
D10
1%
D8
D5
Brahmayya & Co
0%
D4
D5
B K Khare & Co
0%
D5
D5
Deloitte group
Total
84%
Source: Prime database, Bloomberg, Capitaline, Ambit Capital research. Note: *Free float market-cap as of
Nov 16. There is some degree of overlap in this calculation given some of the audit assignments are jointly
audited by one or more auditors. That said, given these overlaps are more of an exception than the rule, the
above exhibit should give a fair indication of the free float market cap audited by these firms. # Using six
years of consolidated financials for BSE500 and sub-BSE500 companies (ex-financials), we assign
accounting scores to the companies. We perceive firms with a high score on our model to have superior
quality of accounts and vice-versa.
Research Analysts
Nitin Bhasin
+91 22 3043 3241
nitinbhasin@ambitcapital.com
Karan Khanna, CFA
+91 22 3043 3251
karankhanna@ambitcapital.com
Ambit Capital and / or its affiliates do and seek to do business including investment banking with companies covered in its research reports. As a result, investors should be aware that Ambit Capital
may have a conflict of interest that could affect the objectivity of this report. Investors should not consider this report as the only factor in making their investment decision.
Thousands of Miles
NOT RATED
September 26, 2016
Summary of flags
Checks on
FLAGS
Research Analysts
Sagar Rastogi
Accounting
Corporate governance
Thousands of Miles
DuPont analysis
Thousands of Miles RoE has been lower than its peers due to lower PAT margin (15%
vs 24% peer group median, FY16) and asset turnover vs its peers. Consummation of
acquisitions like SERJ (acquired at an EV/sales =0.35), Cintel systems (acquired at an
EV/sales = 0.5), NexAge (acquired at an EV/Sales = 0.6) and Mind print (acquired at
approximate EV/sales = 0.8) resulted in an improvement in Asset Turnover ratio in
FY15-16.
The companys RoEs improved significantly to 26% in FY16 vs 14% two years ago
(FY14). As seen in the DuPont analysis exhibit below, the improvement in RoE was
mainly explained by improvement in asset turnover as the company grew its sales by
118% in FY16. PAT margin, however, remained flat in FY16.
Exhibit 1: Lower ROE compared to peers
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
15%
15%
14%
23%
26%
32%
23%
14%
16%
22%
Accelya Kale
29%
70%
82%
60%
73%
MPS
16%
42%
48%
35%
27%
Persistent Systems
18%
20%
22%
22%
20%
eClerx
55%
44%
50%
35%
40%
29%
42%
48%
35%
27%
Thousands of Miles
Peers
Take Solutions
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: MPS had reported a loss in FY11 and has been excluded from
the ROE exhibit
Asset Turnover
Leverage
FY11
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY11
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY11
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
13%
17%
15%
14%
15%
15%
1.1
0.6
0.7
0.7
1.1
1.3
0.7
1.4
1.4
1.5
1.4
1.4
15%
13%
11%
8%
11%
12%
1.1
1.3
1.3
1.1
0.9
1.1
1.4
1.8
1.7
1.6
1.6
1.6
9%
19%
28%
27%
22%
24%
2.8
1.4
2.4
2.9
2.6
2.9
0.6
1.1
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.0
5%
19%
21%
26%
26%
1.7
2.5
2.1
2.3
1.3
1.0
1.2
1.1
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.0
14%
14%
15%
15%
13%
1.1
1.3
1.3
1.4
1.4
1.5
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
34%
26%
30%
24%
28%
1.6
1.6
1.7
1.6
1.4
1.4
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
14%
19%
21%
22%
24%
1.6
1.4
1.7
1.6
1.4
1.4
1.0
1.1
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.0
MPS
-65%
Persistent
18%
Systems
eClerx
36%
Peer group
15%
median
Source: Company, Ambit
Capital research
Page 39
Thousands of Miles
Mar-12
Mar-13
Mar-14
Mar-15
Mar-16
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
62%
60%
53%
45%
47%
Other expenses
14%
19%
16%
24%
21%
EBITDA
24%
21%
31%
31%
33%
Finance costs
0%
1%
1%
0%
0%
4%
3%
10%
7%
7%
20%
17%
21%
23%
25%
3%
2%
4%
5%
6%
17%
15%
17%
18%
20%
3%
3%
5%
17%
15%
14%
15%
15%
Frequent reclassifications
Other expenses
In the exhibit below, we benchmark the other expenses reported by Thousands of
Miles with non-operating expense reported by peers. We find that Thousands of
Miles other expenses were below peers in FY12 but increased over the years, peaked
in FY15 and remained in line with peer group median in FY16.
Exhibit 4: Thousands of Miles other expenses as compared to peers
as % of revenue
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Thousands of Miles
14%
19%
16%
24%
21%
Take Solutions
19%
22%
23%
24%
23%
Accelya Kale
30%
21%
20%
20%
21%
MPS
32%
26%
24%
21%
21%
Persistent Systems
14%
16%
15%
15%
15%
eClerx
17%
17%
17%
20%
19%
19%
21%
20%
20%
21%
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note that different companies have different ways of reporting other
income, this comparison is meant for a broad check
In the exhibit below we dig deeper into why the other expenses reported by the
company have increased in recent years (FY15-16) as a percentage of revenues. We
notice that the companys spending on travelling and business promotion expenses
Page 40
Thousands of Miles
has gone up substantially and peaked out during FY14-15 (14-16% of revenues for
FY14 and FY15). Though this has come down sharply in FY16, we are of the view that
this decrease may be because of the change in classification of other expenses rather
than the actual decrease in such expenses.
The classification of other expenses reporting has changed considerably over time,
rendering it difficult to compare time series data on a like to like basis. For instance,
in FY15 annual report, travelling and business promotion expenses, for FY15 are
reported as single line item (Rs195mn) while in FY16 annual report they seem to be
reported as three different line items - travelling & logistics (FY15-Rs27.4mn),
business promotion related (FY15-19.6mn), immigration expenses (FY15-Rs25.6mn).
Surprisingly summation of these three line items (Rs72.6mn) would not result in
reconciliation of numbers reported in the two annual reports. The difference amounts
to 30% of FY16 PAT. There are similar discrepancies even in other line items like
Rent, Rates & Taxes. While companies change/reclassify their line items, appropriate
and adequate disclosures and reconciliations regarding the same are expected by the
investors for making comparisons across time and across peer group.
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Auditors Remuneration
0.1%
0.1%
0.0%
0.4%
0.3%
1.4%
0.1%
0.0%
2.1%
2.4%
0.2%
0.0%
14.5%
15.6%
4.0%
Communication
0.2%
0.1%
0.1%
0.8%
1.7%
Rent
Non-classified expenses (mainly other general
and administration expenses)
Total Other Expenses
0.7%
0.5%
0.3%
1.1%
1.6%
11.3%
18.5%
0.7%
4.0%
10.6%
13.9%
19.4%
15.6%
23.9%
20.6%
Source: company
Source: company
In the FY14 annual report, the company has reported its FY13 intangible assets
as Rs14,354 on the balance sheet (page 78). However in the financial schedule
for breakup of fixed assets, the total of intangible assets is shown as Rs57.4mn
(page 88).
Page 41
Thousands of Miles
amount for FY13 does not appear in balance sheet and financial schedules of
FY14 annual report.
In the FY12 annual report, the companys total gross fixed assets increased from
Rs0.3mn to Rs9.5mn (page 70) due to consolidation of Mentorminds. The
numbers for net fixed assets were re-stated accordingly but the number for gross
fixed assets were not re-stated.
In the FY13 annual report, the company added some new entries to FY13 gross
block (page 67) related to consolidation and re-stated net fixed assets for FY12
but not the gross fixed assets. The table of breakup of fixed assets in the FY13
annual report is not easily readable because the table is probably a scanned
image. For one of the consolidation entries (item 6 in the table) the company
added Rs8.2mn to the gross block but depreciated it by Rs7.0mn in the same
year.
FY12**
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
13.5%
9.8%
13.7%
13.9%
15.3%
2.5%
130.7%
26.4%
22.9%
25.3%
We point out that prior to FY16 there are some differences in total depreciation
expense disclosed in the income statement and the breakup of tangible asset
depreciation and intangible asset depreciation given in financial schedules.
Exhibit 9: Breakup of depreciation expense
Rs mn
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
8.1
43.1
91.2
202.3
8.1
2.1
4.3
17.4
0.1
35.7
62.4
184.8
8.2
37.7
66.7
202.3
% difference
1%
-12%
-27%
0%
Page 42
Thousands of Miles
Exhibit 10: Intangible assets depreciation rate comparison
Intangibles
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Thousands of Miles
26.3%
0.2%
11.4%
9.1%
15.0%
Take Solutions
14.7%
19.4%
21.7%
15.0%
15.3%
9.7%
10.0%
8.7%
9.0%
9.4%
MPS
28.0%
16.9%
10.6%
6.6%
1.9%
Persistent Systems
11.0%
20.5%
17.4%
7.6%
14.7%
eClerx
19.1%
19.6%
13.9%
12.7%
4.1%
Peer Median
14.7%
19.4%
13.9%
9.0%
9.4%
Accelya Kale
Page 43
Thousands of Miles
FY15 depreciation
expense
FY15 depreciation
as % of gross block**
0.04
0.04
0.01
15.2%
30.9
79.4
9.5
17.2%
Goodwill
74.0
74.0
29.6
40.0%
426.5
604.4
10.9
2.1%
0.0
84.4
12.4
29.4%
531.4
842.3
62.4
9.1%
Total
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: *The gross intangible assets data given here excludes intangible assets under development; ** depreciation as %
of gross block is calculated by dividing depreciation expense for FY15 by average of gross block for FY14 and FY15.
Page 44
Thousands of Miles
Exhibit 12: Intangible gross block classification in FY16 annual report
Source: company
Source: company
Page 45
Thousands of Miles
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Thousands of Miles
17%
12%
19%
20%
22%
Take Solutions
18%
17%
2%
6%
14%
Accelya Kale
32%
31%
33%
37%
35%
MPS
26%
22%
34%
34%
32%
Persistent Systems
28%
29%
27%
25%
25%
eClerx
20%
19%
23%
23%
24%
Peer Median
26%
22%
27%
25%
25%
Exhibit 15: other income as percentage of PBT is lower for Thousands of Miles
Other income as % of PBT
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Thousands of Miles
1.5%
1.5%
0.5%
1.0%
0.3%
Take solutions
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
1.9%
Accelya Kale
3.8%
-2.4%
3.4%
5.4%
7.2%
MPS
46.0%
12.5%
10.1%
11.6%
17.5%
Persistent Systems
13.0%
2.3%
4.4%
23.9%
19.0%
eClerx
11.2%
-8.6%
3.3%
10.9%
8.5%
11.2%
0.0%
3.4%
10.9%
8.5%
Page 46
Thousands of Miles
Thousands of Miles
FY11
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
367%
-52%
-124%
97%
83%
24%
Take Solutions
60%
83%
76%
71%
55%
71%
Accelya Kale
73%
110%
110%
105%
82%
96%
MPS
33%
84%
82%
77%
59%
121%
78%
83%
88%
106%
99%
eClerx
88%
111%
76%
77%
98%
79%
Peer Median
80%
83%
83%
82%
82%
79%
Persistent Systems
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research Note: MPS had reported a loss in FY11 and has been excluded from
the above exhibit
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
Thousands of Miles
84
145
103
55
110
Take Solutions
30
51
65
85
68
Accelya Kale
59
46
33
40
49
28
43
47
Persistent Systems
21
28
23
24
16
eClerx
55
55
68
72
34
Peer Median
30
46
33
43
47
MPS
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: Following reclassification of reporting structure, Thousands of
Miles has reporting been zero payables since FY13.
In the exhibit below, we break down the components of Thousands of Miles working
capital cycle and compare it with peers. The biggest driver of the increase in the
companys working capital cycle in FY16 has been in unbilled revenue (increased to
36 days from zero days in FY15). While fixed price contracts contributed 40% of FY16
revenues, unbilled revenue days of 36 days are much higher than peer group median
of 13 days. Here, we are concerned that the company might have switched to more
aggressive revenue recognition policies. Improvement in creditor days (33 days from
25 days in FY15) scenario is more than offset by worsening of receivable days (108
days from 80 days in FY15) and unbilled revenue days.
Page 47
Thousands of Miles
Exhibit 18: Breakup of cash conversion cycle as compared to peers
Receivable days
Creditor days
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY14
FY15
FY16
112
80
108
36
25
33
103
55
110
101
117
107
13
17
20
49
50
58
65
85
68
Accelya Kale
45
44
42
21
23
28
33
26
21
33
40
49
MPS
58
61
64
14
14
13
43
32
30
28
43
47
Persistent Systems
66
69
67
18
17
52
56
60
16
Thousands of Miles
Peers
Take Solutions
eClerx
43
48
52
36
38
11
14
18
68
72
34
58
61
64
14
17
13
33
26
30
56
60
47
Cumulative
CFI
Cumulative
(CFO+CFI)
Median
revenues
FY12-FY16
FY12-FY16
FY12-FY16
FY12-FY16
464
(1,857)
(1,394)
441
(3.2)
Take Solutions
5,918
(5,179)
740
8,155
0.1
Accelya Kale
4,272
(660)
3,612
3,038
1.2
MPS
1,749
(1,784)
(35)
2,040
(0.0)
Persistent Systems
12,635
(8,139)
4,496
16,692
0.3
eClerx
11,333
(7,110)
4,223
8,410
0.5
5,918
(5,179)
3,612
8,155
0.3
Company name
Thousands of Miles
The cash flow item in Reserves and Surplus item does not tally (for FY14 & FY16)
with the breakup of reserves and surplus given by the company in its financial
schedules for consolidated balance sheet. Based on FY15 data, we assume that
this cash flow entry mainly pertains to two things shown in the breakup of
reserves and surplus: 1) addition to capital reserves (including to securities
premium account) during the year; 2) foreign currency translation effects.
Page 48
Thousands of Miles
Pages 96 and 97 of FY15 annual report shows that the company has reported
Rs418m as addition and Rs54m as deduction from capital reserves for FY14 and
FY15 respectively. There is no disclosure on how these numbers were arrived at
or what the underlying reasons behind it were. Surprisingly, page 120 of FY16
annual report paints a different picture. Opening and closing balances for FY15
capital reserves and securities premium account do not reconcile with each other
(based on FY15 and FY16 annual reports). We expect further clarity and
disclosures regarding this from the management.
Given that the company reported Rs859mn in FY16 cash flow statement related to
reserves and surplus there might also be an offsetting entry in investing cash flow
section so that there is no impact on change in cash for the year. This could lead to
overstatement of cash outflow related to investments made by the company.
We also noticed that the individual line items for FY15 financing cash flow do not add
up to the total financing cash flow of Rs436mn disclosed by the company. This is
likely a typographical error and the correct number should have been Rs205mn. This
way the individual line items add up to the total financing cash flow and total change
in cash equals sum of operating, investing and financing cash flows.
Due to above issues, we assign a RED FLAG.
Exhibit 20: Cash flow statement of the company is a black box
Cash used in financing activities
Share Capital
Application money pending allotment
In Reserves & Surplus
Deferred Tax liabilities
Interest Paid
Increase in Non-Current Liabilities
Net Cash Used In Financing Activities (3)
Net Increase in Cash and Cash Equivalents (1+2+3)
Mar-14
Mar-15
Mar-16
3.0
5.5
115.0
(57.5)
481.1
185.1
859.6
4.3
1.2
(3.7)
(4.5)
(2.1)
5.6
(94.7)
0.4
487.3
436.1
805.9
33.9
99.5
137.7
14.5
48.3
147.8
48.3
147.8
285.5
78%
19%
42%
Source: company
Source: company
Capital allocation
Getting insights on Thousands of Miles capital allocation is challenging given that we
dont fully understand where the financing cash flow is coming from and there is no
granular breakup on where the investing cash flow is being spent. In the exhibit
below we take a deeper look at how the company has allocated its capital from
FY12-FY16.
Out of total inflows of Rs2.9bn, 57% have come from financing cash flows and the
rest came from operating cash flows (before working capital adjustments). Out of
Page 49
Thousands of Miles
total cash outflows of Rs2.6bn, 69% was used towards investment activities while the
rest was used for investing in working capital.
Exhibit 23: Getting insights into capital allocation is challenging
Inflows: FY12-16: Rs2.9bn
Operating
Cash Flow
(before
WC
changes)
43%
Working
Capital
31%
Financing
cash flow
57%
Investing
cash flow
69%
Source: Company, Ambit Capital research; Note: For Financing cash flow we have used RS205m as the number for FY15 instead of Rs436m due to a typo in the
companys annual report
Page 50
Thousands of Miles
Corporate governance
Companys
CEO
serves
remuneration committee
on
nomination
and
Thousands of Miles had a close-knit Board comprising only five people till FY15.
However, the strength of the board has expanded to seven members by the close of
FY16. The Board includes four independent directors (only two till FY15) whilst the
other three Board members are promoters/part of the management team (CEO, CFO
and COO). The companys Nomination and Remuneration committee consists of
three non-independent directors and only one independent director. Thus, we have a
situation where a companys top management is a part of the committee that
oversees policies related to its own compensation. Hence, we assign an AMBER
FLAG.
Exhibit 24: Board of directors
Name
Suresh Venkatachari
Gurumurthi Jayaraman
(Independent)
Ramani RS
Padmini Ravichandran
(Independent)
Lakshmanan Kannappan
Background
CEO , Chairman and Promoter of the company (held 55.25% stake as of September 2015)
Has more than 26+ years of experience in the IT solutions & consulting industry
Has founded four IT companies over the past 14 years
Previously served as Head of Electronic Banking at Deutsche Bank, Singapore
Other Directorship: SolutionNet (Asia Pacific) Pte Ltd; Mentor Minds Solutions and Services Pvt. Ltd.;
Imogo Tech Solutions Pvt Ltd
Over 14 years of experience in service industry predominantly in India and a few years in Australia
Ardent marketing professional with a Post Graduate in Business Administration from SRM university
Source: Company, Media Sources; Note that Mr. Dinesh R Punniamurthy and Ms. Babita Singaram were appointed as additional directors under independent and
non-executive category w.e.f 31st March 2016
Appointment Date
Suresh Venkatachari
5/7
Aug-2010
Gurumurthi Jayaraman
7/7
Feb-2014
RS Ramani
7/7
Aug-2011
Padmini Ravichandran
7/7
Aug-2010
Lakshmanan Kannappan*
4/7
Mar-2015
Dinesh R Punniamurthy
1/7
Mar-2016
Babita Singaram
1/7
Mar-2016
Source: Company, Media Sources; Note that Dinesh RP and Babita S are appointed as independent directors
w.e.f 31st March 2016 and hence their attendance does not reflect full year meetings
Page 51
Thousands of Miles
Background
Reza Nazleman
Jason Rouault
Jeff Nigriny
Dinesh Yadav
Suja Chandrasekaran
Rajan Natarajan
Senior health system developer & manager with 30 years of managed care experience in hospitals & major health plans
Previously served as advisor / manager to select healthcare organizations in US, Britain, Argentina, Saudi Arabia etc
A global IT executive with 20+ years of proven leadership in professional services and operational end-to-end
accountability with EUnet, France Telecom, McKinsey & Co., KPMG, BearingPoint, Bank of Scotland, and Microsoft.
Former Head of Global IT Transformation, Microsoft
Senior Director of Engineering at Time Warner Cable; responsible for the ongoing development, operation, and support
of the TWC OpenStack Cloud
Previously worked as CTO of the Hewlett-Packards Identity Management business
Founder and President of CertiPath, a trust framework provider that certifies authentication and access control devices
with a focus on high assurance for aerospace and defense industries and government agencies
Responsible for sales, channel and go-to-market for IBMs security solutions
CIO of Kimberly-Clark corporation, Suja leads all technology, digital, data and application capabilities globally
President of TechnoGen Inc. and serving on the Maryland cybersecurity council, board of directors of Maryland chamber
of commerce
Source: Company
% of net worth
10.2
1.3%
4.9
0.6%
11.6
1.4%
1.7
0.2%
Standalone
Consolidated
Loans and advances from directors
Long term loans and advances to related parties (asset)
Source: FY14 annual report
Page 52
Thousands of Miles
On 25th Aug 2014, the SEBI had released an amendment following which the warrant
price calculation was to be based on volume weighted average price (VWAP) vs THE
old rule of using closing price. The stock prices are to be considered for the exchange
where higher number of shares of the company trade. In the exhibit below, we
calculate the SEBI mandated floor price for the warrant using old and amended rules
and using both BSE and NSE stock prices. Note that we are not including the previous
26 week average because it is much lower than the previous 2 week average and is
inconsequential given that higher of the two prices is considered as the floor price.
Exhibit 28: Calculation of warrant floor price as per SEBI rules
Date
Week 1
Week 2
NSE
BSE
Closing Price
VWAP
Closing Price
VWAP
26-Sep-14
469.9
465.5
468.8
465.9
25-Sep-14
447.6
452.4
446.5
452.9
24-Sep-14
452.4
447.2
449.4
443.3
23-Sep-14
452.2
454.2
448.4
452.4
22-Sep-14
451.0
445.8
449.5
443.6
19-Sep-14
429.6
423.6
428.1
420.7
18-Sep-14
390.5
381.1
389.2
382.6
17-Sep-14
355.0
345.9
353.9
336.0
16-Sep-14
326.0
338.3
327.2
337.3
15-Sep-14
347.6
347.0
347.3
346.9
Week 1 min
447.6
445.8
446.5
443.3
Week 1 max
469.9
465.5
468.8
465.9
Week 2 min
326.0
338.3
327.2
336.0
Week 2 max
429.6
423.6
428.1
420.7
Average Price
418.2
418.3
417.7
416.5
Our calculations suggest that the SEBI mandated warrant floor price should have
been in Rs416-419 range compared to the price of Rs398.6 at which the company
allotted warrants. The management stated in a TV interview that there was no
discount in the price at which these warrants were allotted without giving further
information. We assign a RED FLAG.
Page 53
Thousands of Miles
This issuance came ahead of a 4x jump in stock price. Minority shareholders were
worse off because the company preferred issuing warrants instead of common equity.
The company does not have a usual practice of issuing warrants and the issuance in
Dec-14 was one-off. We assign an additional AMBER FLAG for this reason.
Exhibit 29: List of shareholders to whom warrants were issued
Name of the allottee
Category
No of securities
Suresh Venkatachari
Promoter
450,000
Promoter
150,000
Non-Promoter
400,000
Sarojini Tandon
Non-Promoter
300,000
Non-Promoter
100,000
Total
1,400,000
During FY16, holders of 0.55mn (0.3mn during FY15) warrants have exercised their
rights and converted their warrants to shares.
Exhibit 30: Conversion of warrants to shares
Date
Category
No of securities
8 Oct 2015
Promoter
150,000
20 Apr 2015
Non-Promoter
400,000
Sarojini Tandon
Non-Promoter
300,000
Total
850,000
Page 54
Thousands of Miles
Auditor checks
Auditors Remuneration
Higher growth in auditors remuneration relative to companys consolidated revenues
remains a cause of concern for us.
Exhibit 31: Growth in companys revenues vs auditors remuneration
CAGR in auditor's remuneration
FY12-FY16
FY12-FY16
162%
90%
Thousands of Miles
Source: Ambit Capital research, company
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
0.1%
0.1%
0.0%
0.4%
0.3%
Source: Company
Auditor rotation
The company had last changed its auditor in FY12 to GHG Associates. The Board has
recently passed a resolution that seeks to appoint GHG Associates as auditors of the
company until FY21 (subject to ratification of their appointment at every AGM). We
view this as a lack of intent towards rotating the auditors and raise a RED FLAG.
Insider trading
As per Bloomberg, there were only two major transactions in Thousands of Miles
shares and none of them involved insiders.
Exhibit 33: Insider trading grab from Bloomberg
Page 55
(022) 30433174
(022) 30433124
saurabh.mukherjea@ambit.co
pramod.gubbi@ambit.co
Research Analysts
Name
Industry Sectors
Desk-Phone
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
30433241
30433239
30433085
30433122
30433284
30433285
30433252
30433275
30433264
30433132
30433211
30433251
30433214
30433206
30433212
30433223
30433218
30433217
30433201
30433181
30433242
30433246
30433175
30433292
30433291
30433203
30433229
30433209
30433261
E-mail
nitin.bhasin@ambit.co
aadesh.mehta@ambit.co
abhishek.r@ambit.co
anuj.bansal@ambit.co
aditi.singh@ambit.co
ashvin.shetty@ambit.co
bhargav.buddhadev@ambit.co
deepesh.agarwal@ambit.co
dhiraj.mistry@ambit.co
gaurav.khandelwal@ambit.co
girisha.saraf@ambit.co
karan.khanna@ambit.co
mayank.porwal@ambit.co
pankaj.agarwal@ambit.co
paresh.dave@ambit.co
parita.ashar@ambit.co
prashant.mittal@ambit.co
rahil.shah@ambit.co
rakshit.ranjan@ambit.co
ravi.singh@ambit.co
ritesh.gupta@ambit.co
ritesh.vaidya@ambit.co
ritika.mankar@ambit.co
ritu.modi@ambit.co
sagar.rastogi@ambit.co
sudheer.guntupalli@ambit.co
sumit.shekhar@ambit.co
utsav.mehta@ambit.co
vivekanand.s@ambit.co
Sales
Name
Regions
UK
India / Asia
India
India / Asia
Europe
UK
India / Asia
India
Desk-Phone
+44 (0) 20 7886 2740
(022) 30433289
(022) 30433053
(022) 30433295
(022) 30433259
(022) 30433169
(022) 30433198
(022) 30433256
E-mail
sarojini.r@ambit.co
dharmen.shah@ambit.co
dipti.mehta@ambit.co
krishnanv@ambit.co
nityam.shah@ambit.co
parees.purohit@ambit.co
punitraj.mehra@ambit.co
shaleen.silori@ambit.co
Singapore
Praveena Pattabiraman
Shashank Abhisheik
Singapore
Singapore
praveena.pattabiraman@ambit.co
shashankabhisheik@ambitpte.com
USA / Canada
Ravilochan Pola CEO
Hitakshi Mehra
Americas
Americas
ravi.pola@ambitamerica.co
hitakshi.mehra@ambitamerica.co
Production
Sajid Merchant
Sharoz G Hussain
Jestin George
Richard Mugutmal
Nikhil Pillai
Production
Production
Editor
Editor
Database
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
(022)
30433247
30433183
30433272
30433273
30433265
sajid.merchant@ambit.co
sharoz.hussain@ambit.co
jestin.george@ambit.co
richard.mugutmal@ambit.co
nikhil.pillai@ambit.co
Page 56
Oct-15
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
Oct-13
Aug-13
Jun-13
Apr-13
Feb-13
Dec-12
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
BIOCON LTD
Source: Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research
Oct-16
Aug-16
Jun-16
Apr-16
Feb-16
Dec-15
Oct-15
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
1,000
800
600
400
200
0
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Dec-15
Oct-15
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
Dec-15
Oct-15
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
Page 57
Dec-15
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Oct-15
Dec-15
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Oct-15
Dec-15
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Oct-15
Dec-15
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
UPL Ltd
Source: Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
Page 58
Aug-16
Jun-16
Apr-16
Feb-16
Dec-15
Oct-15
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
Unitech Ltd
Source: Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research
Dec-15
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Oct-15
Dec-15
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Nov-15
Jan-16
Mar-16
May-16
Jul-16
Sep-16
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
Arshiya Ltd
Source: Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
Sep-15
Jul-15
May-15
Mar-15
Jan-15
Nov-14
Sep-14
Jul-14
May-14
Mar-14
Jan-14
Nov-13
100
80
60
40
20
0
Page 59
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Jan-16
Mar-16
May-16
Jul-16
Sep-16
Feb-16
Apr-16
Jun-16
Aug-16
Oct-16
Jan-16
Mar-16
May-16
Jul-16
Sep-16
Dec-15
Nov-15
Dec-15
Nov-15
Oct-15
Oct-15
Sep-15
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
1,400
1,200
1,000
800
600
400
200
0
Sep-15
Jul-15
May-15
Mar-15
Jan-15
Nov-14
Sep-14
Jul-14
May-14
Mar-14
Jan-14
Nov-13
1,400
1,200
1,000
800
600
400
200
0
Aug-15
Jun-15
Apr-15
Feb-15
Dec-14
Oct-14
Aug-14
Jun-14
Apr-14
Feb-14
Dec-13
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
Wockhardt Ltd
Source: Bloomberg, Ambit Capital research
May-15
Mar-15
Jan-15
Nov-14
Sep-14
Jul-14
May-14
Mar-14
Jan-14
Nov-13
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BUY
>10%
SELL
NO STANCE
<10%
We have forward looking estimates for the stock but we refrain from assigning valuation and recommendation
UNDER REVIEW
We will revisit our recommendation, valuation and estimates on the stock following recent events
NOT RATED
We do not have any forward looking estimates, valuation or recommendation for the stock
POSITIVE
We have a positive view on the sector and most of stocks under our coverage in the sector are BUYs
NEGATIVE
We have a negative view on the sector and most of stocks under our coverage in the sector are SELLs
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Disclosures
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The analyst (s) has/have not served as an officer, director or employee of the subject company.
There is no material disciplinary action that has been taken by any regulatory authority impacting equity research analysis activities.
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