India Strategy | Get on track please !
Thematic | June 2017
Contrarian Investing
It pays to be different
Gautam.Duggad
(Gautam.Duggad@MotilalOswal.com); +91 22 6129 1522
Bharat Arora
(Bharat.Arora
@MotilalOswal.com); +9122 3982 5410
Investors are advised to refer through important disclosures made at the last page of the Research Report.
Motilal Oswal research is available on www.motilaloswal.com/Institutional-Equities, Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, Factset and S&P Capital.

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Contents: It pays to be different
It pays to be different ........................................................................................................... 3
Top contrarian
BUY
ideas ...................................................................................................... 6
Top contrarian
SELL
ideas ..................................................................................................... 9
Interesting charts from the note ......................................................................................... 11
Key quotes and references on contrarian investing ............................................................ 12
Contrarian investing: What it is; why it works .................................................................... 13
What is stock popularity? ................................................................................................... 19
Analyzing themes based on consensus recommendations .................................................. 21
Neutral to moderately popular stocks emerge winners ...................................................... 23
Up-capture and down-capture ............................................................................................ 27
Quintile-4 is best on risk-reward metric .............................................................................. 29
Final thoughts: Is consensus change significant? ................................................................. 30
Cases based on popularity theme ....................................................................................... 32
Consensus sells are significant underperformers ................................................................ 37
Consesus buys are not always great investments ............................................................... 40
Summary: Performance of the quintiles
............................................................................. 42
Contrarian strategies based on valuation multiples ............................................................ 44
Low P/E stocks outperform high P/E stocks ........................................................................ 46
Low P/B stocks dominate, but overall results mixed ........................................................... 54
Summary: Performance of contrarian themes
.................................................................... 56
Analysis of sectors on our framework ................................................................................. 57
Metals: A contra bet of CY16 .............................................................................................. 58
Pharma: Ripe for a contrarian bet ....................................................................................... 60
Information Technology: A contrarian bet? Not yet !! ........................................................ 63
June 2017
2

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Contrarian Investing
It pays to be different
Identifying contrarian investment strategies that work
Contrarian investing is a time-tested investment tool, which
involves buying/selling
stocks that goes against the prevailing sentiment of crowd or the market.
It is
among the first lessons taught to budding investors and literature on the subject
dates back decades.
Contrarian Investment Strategies: The Psychological Edge
by
David Dreman,
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowd
by
Charles Mackay, and
The Triumph of Contrarian Investing
by Ned Devis are only
some of the literary works that help understand this subject. The objective of this
report is to develop an application toolkit for India. We have covered two major
themes based on consensus ratings (stock popularity) and valuation multiples, and
have demonstrated the success of contrarian investing in India.
What is stock popularity?
Bloomberg collects analyst recommendations on each stock and assigns a consensus
rating based on these recommendations. It assigns 5 points for every buy
recommendation, 3 points for every hold recommendation and 1 point for every sell
recommendation. A consensus rating is arrived at by taking the average of these
scores.
Popularity
Average
BSE100 popularity
4.3
4.0
3.8
3.5
3.3
3.0
Contrarian Investing:
It pays to be different
A stock with a consensus rating of 5 would have all buy recommendations.
A stock with a consensus rating of 3 would have an equal number of sell and buy
recommendations, apart from hold/neutral recommendations.
A stock with a rating change from <3 to >3 has a recommendation change from
a net sell to a net buy.
A stock with a consensus rating of 1 would have all sell recommendations.
Consensus sell rating (%) of a stock = number of sell recommendations / total
recommendations.
Consensus buy rating (%) of a stock = number of buy recommendations / total
recommendations.
Contrarian investing can generate disproportionate return
Gautam.Duggad@motilaloswal.com
+
91 22 3982 5404
Please click here for Video Link
Our analysis based on empirical evidence over the last decade suggests that
investing in out-of-favor stocks can generate disproportionate returns as
compared to the market.
Our findings suggest that neutral to moderately popular stocks deliver
significant outperformance, even bettering the most popular stocks. Our
findings are in harmony with the findings of
“Analyzing the analysts: When do
recommendations add value?”
by
Narasimhan Jegadeesh, Joonghyuk Kim,
Susan D Krische and Charles Lee, Journal of Finance 2004,
that in the absence of
favorable characteristics (value stocks and positive momentum stocks), the most
popular stocks are associated with the worst returns.
June 2017
3

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Our findings prove that out-of-favor low P/E stocks deliver disproportionate
returns, significantly beating the benchmark. In contrast, the performance of
high P/E stocks is dismal. Our findings are in harmony with the findings of
“Cross-Section
of Expected Stock Returns”, by Fama-French,
Journal of Finance,
1992.
Great recommendation: Buy stocks with a consensus change from net sell
to net buy
Our findings suggest that a simple strategy of investing in stocks for which
analyst consensus has changed from “net sell to net buy” with a holding period
of one year has delivered 24.1% annual returns over the last 10 years.
In the study,
“Analyzing the analysts: When do recommendations add value?”
the
authors also find that the quarterly "change" in consensus recommendations is a
robust return predictor that appears to contain information not contained in a large
range of other predictive variables.
As a part of our analysis, we
have divided BSE100 in 5
groups of 20 – Quintile-1
(Q1), Quintile-2 (Q2),
Quintile-3 (Q3), Quintile-4
(Q4) and Quintile-5 (Q5),
respectively, with Q1 being
composed of the most
popular stocks and so on
60 winners (Q4, Q2, Q1): 40 losers (Q5, Q3)
Besides the superiority of neutral to moderately-popular stocks, we have
established that the most popular (Q1) and second-most popular (Q2) stocks also
beat the benchmark.
Predicting the winners: Popularity > Consensus Sell > Consensus Buy
The result seems fit, as popularity is an aggregate measure of sell, buy and hold
recommendations, and conveys more information than sell/buy recommendations
in isolation. Consensus sell recommendations, with their scarcity value, are better
predictors of stock performance than buy recommendations.
In each of our valuation
themes, we have made
groups based on P/E and
P/B
Low P/E (P/B) stocks are the
20 stocks in the BSE-100
having the lowest P/E (P/B)
ratios
Trailing multiples are better predictors than forward multiples
Our findings suggest that trailing valuation multiples are much better predictors of
future performance as compared to forward multiples.
Predicting the winners: P/E > P/B
Our findings suggest that the price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple is a better predictor of
returns, outperforming price-to-book (P/B), significantly.
Pharma ripe for Contrarian investing; IT not yet!!
The application of our framework on sectors suggests that opportunity for
contrarian investing is best in the Pharma sector. We have also back-tested the
thesis on the Metals sector based on numbers for FY16, when the sector checked all
the boxes for Contrarian Investing. However, we still do not believe that the IT
sector qualifies for Contrarian Investing yet.
June 2017
4

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 1: Price to Earnings> Price to Book in stock selection
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
Indexed Returns
Low PE
Low PB
BSE 100
Perfromance of different themes
571.1
324.8
269.6
Source: Bloomberg
Top Contrarian BUY ideas based on Popularity metric
Correction
12
Member
Popularity
% of Buy from 52w month
of
Company
ratings
High
return
score
Quintile
(%)
(%)
4
42
-1
25
Colgate
3.26
4
40
-20
-2
Axis Bank
3.22
4
40
-9
8
Bajaj Auto
3.35
4
29
-35
-21
Idea
3.00
4
52
-37
-27
Sun Pharma
3.45
4
28
-22
50
PNB
3.04
Top Contrarian BUY ideas based on Valuation metric
Company
Tech Mahindra
Coal India
Rural Elec.
Shriram Tran. Fin.
Contrarian SELL ideas
COMPANY
Asian Paints
Bajaj Finance
Eicher
Escorts
GAIL
IOC
LIC Housing Fin.
Voltas
12
Trailing
Forward
% of Correction
Popularity
month FY18E
P/E
Buy from 52w
P/E
score
return PE (x)
ratings high (%)
Quintile
Quintile
(%)
5 Yr
Avg
PE (x)
14.0
15.8
4.4
15.1
PE -
Prem/
Disc to
LPA (%)
-14
-12
17
-15
FY18E
PB (x)
1.9
6.2
0.9
1.8
5 Yr
Avg
PB (x)
2.8
6.2
0.9
1.9
PB -
EPS
Prem/ CAGR
Disc to FY17-19
LPA (%)
(%)
-34
9
0
12
3
13
-8
33
FY18E
PE (x)
42.9
21.7
18.9
-6.2
21.2
14.2
5 Yr
Avg
PE (x)
38.3
16.0
18.0
21.1
30.6
10.5
PE -
Prem/
Disc to
LPA (%)
12
35
5
LP
-31
35
FY18E
PB (x)
22.2
2.1
4.3
1.4
3.4
0.8
5 Yr Avg
PB (x)
24.7
1.9
5.1
2.1
5.7
0.8
PB -
Prem/
Disc to
LPA (%)
-10
9
-16
-31
-41
2
EPS
CAGR
FY17-19
(%)
21
64
16
Loss
9
53
5
5
5
3
5
4
5
4
3.94
4.03
3.43
3.68
63
65
52
58
-29
-30
-19
-25
-27
-22
116
-14
12.0
14.0
5.2
12.8
% of
Popularity
Buy/Hold
score
ratings
3.24
4.04
4.00
4.33
3.47
4.03
3.85
3.74
CMP
(INR)
1,164
1,401
27,653
710
360
394
770
465
Member Appreciation
12
PE -
Member
of
from
month Prem/Disc
of PE
return
Popularity 52w low
to LPA
Quintile
Quintile
(%)
(%)
(%)
1
1
2
NA
3
4
4
NA
4
2
2
NA
3
2
3
NA
37
89
54
294
34
92
65
62
18
85
47
242
28
90
59
44
28
98
21
152
-8
-12
47
58
1 Year
Fwd
PB (x)
14.1
6.5
11.1
3.1
1.5
1.9
3.1
4.2
PB -
EPS CAGR
Prem/Disc
FY17-19
to LPA
(%)
(%)
24
125
36
266
-4
69
51
56
14
38
36
38
18
3
16
8
76%
91%
80%
100%
71%
84%
87%
81%
June 2017
5

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Top BUY ideas based on the twin metrcis of Popularity
and Valuation multiples
Our top contrarian picks are:
Axis Bank, Bajaj Auto, Colgate, Coal India, Idea, PNB,
REC, Shriram Transport Finance, Sun Pharma & Tech Mahindra.
Axis Bank
The bank has made significant investments to ride the next growth cycle (post near-
term asset quality challenges), with support in the form of (1) strong capitalization
(13% tier-I) and (2) expanding liability franchise (3,400+ branches). For FY19, we
expect the bank to report 1.3-1.4% RoA and 16% RoE.
Axis Bank features in our list of Buy ideas owing to its presence in Quintile 4 of the
popularity metric.
Bajaj Auto
Valuations at 18.7x/15.8x FY18/19E (MOSL Est.) standalone EPS are attractive,
considering (a) scope of profitable market share gain, (b) high visibility of sustenance
of superior profitability and (c) lower capex requirement driving return ratios.
Bajaj Auto is also a member of Quintile 4 of the popularity metric – its valuations are
at long-period average (LPA), while the rest of the sector is at a premium to its
average valuations.
Colgate
Colgate is a strong play on an imminent rural volume recovery, led by a confluence
of positives such as likely normal monsoon, moderate inflation levels, government
schemes to boost growth (expansion of DBT benefits, increase in rural allocation in
the national/state budgets, and farm loan waivers) and a weak base of the past
three years. Over the medium-to-long term, margin drivers are operating leverage
on expanded capacity, lower A&P compared to elevated levels of the past three
years and continued premiumization. Colgate features in Quintile 4 of the popularity
metric.
Coal India
CIL has a strong balance sheet, healthy cash flow and net cash status. With volume
uptick apparent in the recent months, we believe the benefit of operating leverage
will result in EPS growth.
Coal India features in Quintile 5 of P/E valuation metric (quintile with lowest P/E)
and has valuations which are trading at discount to its LPA.
Idea
Idea’s merger with Vodafone will improve its spectrum and data network quality. In
the current hyper-competitive market, it will allow Idea to match RJio’s offering and
subsequently arrest market share dilution. We believe the industry should stabilize
in the next 3-4 quarters as RJio’s free usage offer concludes and its network reaches
optimum capacity. Idea has one of the lowest Buy ratings on the street and is part of
Quintile 5 of the popularity metric.
June 2017
6

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Punjab National Bank
PNB remains highly levered to the RBI’s resolution mechanisms and an improvement
in recovery environment. Significant stress has been recognized over the last eight
quarters, and OSRL has also come off sharply in last one year. Concentration of Infra
(incl. power) and Iron & Steel is very high in stress loans (50%+), and any upgrade in
these segments can lead to a significant upgrade in earnings. In our view, RoAs and
RoEs have bottomed out in FY17, and we expect a gradual improvement hereon.
PNB is part of Quintile 4 of our popularity metric, and has valuations trading at LPA
with less than 30% of Buy ratings on the street.
Rural Electrification Corporation (REC)
REC’s near- to medium-term earnings were at risk following the implementation of
UDAY. However, progress so far has been encouraging both on the growth and NIM
front, and RECL has delivered good results this year. Despite repayment of DISCOM
debt under the UDAY scheme, loan growth is anticipated to be in positive trajectory,
with working capital and refinancing demand on strong turf. RECL features in
Quintile 5 of our valuation-based metric, with valuations at LPA.
Shriram Transport Finance (SHTF)
SHTF’s return ratios are at cyclical lows, with decadal high credit cost and NPLs. We
believe the worst of asset quality troubles is behind, and SHTF should witness
improving return ratios due to lower credit costs. Additionally, we believe margin
compression fears are overplayed, with the company yet to reap significant benefit
on CoF. SHTF is part of Quintile 3 of our valuation-based metric, with valuations at
discount to long-period averages.
Sun Pharma
Near-term earnings will be under pressure due to the weak business outlook in the
US and the GST impact in India. However, this is more than factored in the recent
stock price decline, in our view (valuations at ~30% below five-year average). We
believe the strategic investments in the specialty business over last 2-3 years,
coupled with stable growth in the domestic market and the enhanced focus on
complex generics in the US, will help drive earnings growth in the medium term.
Sun Pharma is part of Quintile 4 of the popularity metric, with valuations at 30%
discount to long-period average.
Tech Mahindra
Gradual recovery in Telecom and continued outperformance in Enterprise are likely
to lead to an improvement in revenue growth and profitability, subsequently
resulting in valuation catch-up with peers. Tech Mahindra is part of Quintile 5 of the
P/E valuation-based metric, with valuations at ~15% discount to LPA.
June 2017
7

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Top Contrarian BUY ideas based on Popularity metric
Correction
12
Member
Popularity
% of Buy from 52w month
Company
of
ratings
High
return
score
Quintile
(%)
(%)
4
42
-1
25
Colgate
3.26
4
40
-20
-2
Axis Bank
3.22
4
40
-9
8
Bajaj Auto
3.35
5
29
-35
-21
Idea
3.00
4
52
-37
-27
Sun Pharma
3.45
4
28
-22
50
PNB
3.04
Top Contrarian BUY ideas based on Valuation metric
Company
Tech Mahindra
Coal India
Rural Elec.
Shriram Tran. Fin.
FY18E
PE (x)
42.9
21.7
18.9
-6.2
21.2
14.2
5 Yr
Avg
PE (x)
38.3
16.0
18.0
21.1
30.6
10.5
PE -
Prem/
Disc to
LPA (%)
12
35
5
LP
-31
35
FY18E
PB (x)
22.2
2.1
4.3
1.4
3.4
0.8
5 Yr Avg
PB (x)
24.7
1.9
5.1
2.1
5.7
0.8
PB -
Prem/
Disc to
LPA (%)
-10
9
-16
-31
-41
2
EPS
CAGR
FY17-19
(%)
21
64
16
Loss
9
53
12
Trailing
Forward
% of Correction
Popularity
month FY18E
P/E
Buy from 52w
P/E
return PE (x)
score
ratings high (%)
Quintile
Quintile
(%)
5 Yr
Avg
PE (x)
14.0
15.8
4.4
15.1
5
5
5
3
5
4
5
4
3.94
4.03
3.43
3.68
63
65
52
58
-29
-30
-19
-25
-27
-22
116
-14
12.0
14.0
5.2
12.8
PE -
Prem/
Disc to
LPA (%)
-14
-12
17
-15
FY18E
PB (x)
1.9
6.2
0.9
1.8
5 Yr
Avg
PB (x)
2.8
6.2
0.9
1.9
PB -
EPS
Prem/ CAGR
Disc to FY17-19
LPA (%)
(%)
-34
9
0
12
3
13
-8
33
June 2017
8

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Top contrarian SELL ideas
Our top sell ideas are:
Asian Paints, Bajaj Finance, Escorts, GAIL, LIC Housing, IOC,
Eicher and Voltas.
Asian Paints
The slowdown in real estate is likely to inhibit growth prospects. Industry reports
suggest that demand in this segment, which is 20% of the paints business, has nearly
halved in recent months. The company has had tailwind of low crude costs in the
past three years. Any sharp reversal would make margins vulnerable. RoCE has
consistently declined from ~40% in FY11 to ~24% in FY17, as the non-paints
businesses have struggled. Valuations at 42x FY19E EPS are at multi-year highs (5-
year average is 39.6x, 10-year average is 31.2x, and 15-year average is 26.3x).
APNT features in Contrarian Sell owing to its presence in Quintile 1 of P/E based
valuation metric with valuations at 30% premium to LPA and 75% Buy ratings.
Bajaj Finance
BAF – a dominant player in the consumer durables financing segment – continues to
reap the benefits of healthy consumer demand, increasing its market share in
consumer as well as other businesses. While yields are likely to remain under
pressure due to lower share of CD financing, the stock looks expensive at 6.5x/5.2x
FY17E/18E BV (MOSL Est.).
BAF is also a part of Quintile 1 of valuation based metric with valuations at 100%+
premium to its LPA and 90% Buy ratings.
Eicher Motors
We expect Royal Enfield (RE) volume growth to moderate to ~18% CAGR over FY17-
20 (against ~55% CAGR over CY13-FY17). Despite factoring in EBITDA margin of
~33% for RE, consolidated EPS growth is estimated to moderate to ~31% CAGR over
FY17-20 (v/s 62% CAGR over CY13-FY17). This moderation in earnings growth
trajectory would drive moderation in valuations assigned to RE business (we assign
exit P/E of ~27.5x for FY20), which in turn would result in stock underperformance.
Eicher Motors is member of Quintile 2 of P/E based valuation metric with valuations
at 20% premium to its LPA and 80% Buy ratings.
Escorts
FY17 has been a robust year for ESC, with Tractors volume growth of 24% and
EBITDA margin expansion of 280bp. However, Tractors is dependent on monsoon
and undergoes business cycle; delivering growth on linear basis here thus appears
challenging. With sharp-run up in stock , stock doesn’t look attractive on valuation
front. Escort’s valuation are at 150% premium to its LPA with 100% Buy ratings.
GAIL
While we do build in 32%/15% growth in EPS in FY18/19, return ratios of 12% are 5%
lower than what they were five years back. There is no visibility on most part of
5.8mmtpa 20yr contract to import gas from the US. A hit of USD1/mmBtu could
wipe out 22% EBIDTA. The threat calls for lower multiple. We value it at INR357
using 9x FY19 adj EPS & adding value of investments.
Gail features in Quintile 3 of our Popularity metric with 70% Buy ratings.
June 2017
9

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Indian Oil Corporation (IOCL)
Adjusting for inventory gains and one-time employee expense, we would see ~15%
EBITDA increase in FY18, with normalization of Paradip refinery. However, we do
not see more than 3-4% growth in FY19. Market share loss has become significant,
with private players achieving 3% share in petrol and 8% in diesel. Over the next two
years, free cash flow would be good. However, with the company committed to
INR1.75t capex over seven years, the balance sheet is likely to be strained. We see
very little, if any, probability of valuation re-rating from here.
IOCL has 85% Buy ratings with valuations at 70% premium to its LPA on P/B.
LIC Housing Finance
While margins have been on an uptrend over the past four quarters due to declining
cost of funds, growth remains an issue. Core home loan growth has been range-
bound at 9-10% over the past 4-5 quarters. Almost 50% of the incremental loan
growth in FY17 was driven by LAP and developer loans – this has also helped
maintain yields. However, we believe that with the share of non-core book
stabilizing, growth would slow down and margin expansion would be subdued. The
stock has performed well over the past one year and now trades at 2.7x FY19E BV.
LIC Housing Finance has 90% Buy ratings with valuations at 50% premium to its LPA.
Voltas
We expect the air conditioner (AC) industry to see a rapid shift to inverter ACs. We
expect inverter ACs to constitute 30% of industry volumes in CY18 and 50% in CY20.
Voltas has historically been weak in this category; it is likely to lose share to the
Japanese/Koreans. Margins in UCP segment, which were at peak levels of 14.5% in
FY17, are likely to decline over the next two years. Valuations are steep at 35x FY19E
EPS for the UCP segment v/s historical band of 20-25x.
Voltas with 80% Buy ratings and valuations at 50% premium to LPA fits in well in our
Contrarian Sell thesis.
Contrarian SELL ideas
COMPANY
% of
Popularity
Buy/Hold
score
ratings
CMP
(INR)
Member Appreciation
12
PE -
Member
of
from
month Prem/Disc
of PE
return
Popularity 52w low
to LPA
Quintile
Quintile
(%)
(%)
(%)
1 Year
Fwd
PB (x)
PB -
EPS CAGR
Prem/Disc
FY17-19
to LPA
(%)
(%)
Asian Paints
3.24
1,164
76%
Bajaj Finance
4.04
1,401
91%
Eicher
4.00
27,653
80%
Escorts
4.33
710
100%
GAIL
3.47
360
71%
IOC
4.03
394
84%
LIC Housing Fin.
3.85
770
87%
Voltas
3.74
465
81%
Disclaimer:
The ideas highlighted in this section may
specialist analysts.
1
4
37
18
14.1
14
28
24
1
2
89
85
6.5
38
98
125
2
2
54
47
11.1
36
21
36
NA
NA
294
242
3.1
38
152
266
3
3
34
28
1.5
18
-8
-4
4
2
92
90
1.9
3
-12
69
4
3
65
59
3.1
16
47
51
NA
NA
62
44
4.2
8
58
56
not be in consonance with the ratings assigned to the respective stocks by our sector-
June 2017
10

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Three interesting charts from this report
Exhibit 2 highlights the comparison of Trailing Price to Book vs. RoE for the markets and compares the historical
trend.
Exhibit 2: Herd behavior evident in 2007-2008 – Nifty P/B (trailing) v/s RoE
Market Price to Book Ratio(trailing) Vs Return on Equity
7.0
6.0
5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
13
16
19
22
Dec-08
Undervalued
y = 0.1859x + 0.284R² = 0.661
25
28
Source: NSE
Valuations haven’t yet reached the
stratospheric levels of Dec’07. RoE is
lower today but so is Cost of Equity.
Current
Mar-15
Overvalued
In the earlier peak of Dec’07,
RoE was much higher.
Dec-07
Exhibit 3 demonstrates the key finding of our analysis based on popularity of consensus ratings – Quintile 4
(Neutral to Moderately Popular) stocks have given best returns.
Exhibit 3: Stocks on which consensus is neutral to moderately positive have performed best
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100 by popularity ( quarterly rebalance)
500
400
300
200
100
0
Absolute Total returns (Average
)
Most Popular(CAGR-14.8%)
Q3(CAGR-5.6%)
Q5(CAGR-6.9%)
Q2(CAGR-13.5%)
Q4(CAGR-16.0%)
BSE100(CAGR-10.2%)
458.0
405.6
372.0
269.6
198.0
174.8
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 4 chart juxtaposes the popularity of current constituents of Sensex based on consensus ratings.
Exhibit 4: Stock popularity of 30 largest companies arranged by consensus popularity ratings
Consensus rating of 30 largest stocks of BSE100
100%
75%
50%
25%
0%
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Buy(%)
Consensus rating(rhs)
5.0
3.8
2.5
1.3
0.0
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Key quotes and references on contrarian investing
Jesse Livermore, one of the greatest stock traders of all time, has remarked, “Wall
Street never changes. The pockets change, the stocks change, but Wall Street
never changes because human nature never changes”.
What he said decades ago
holds true today as well! Contrarian investing works on the same premise.
As early as the 1840s, in his remarkable book,
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and
the Madness of Crowd,
Charles Mackay observed: “We find that whole communities
suddenly fix their minds upon one object and go mad in its pursuit; that millions of
people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion, and run after it…Sober
nations have all at once become desperate gamblers and risked almost their
existence upon the turn of piece of paper …Men, it has been well said, think in herds
…go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly and one by one.”
Benjamin Graham’s “Intelligent Investor”
cites a study involving the constituents of
Dow Jones Industrial Average.
The performance of the 10 lowest P/E stocks, 10
highest P/E stocks, and of all the 30 stocks in the index was measured over set
periods between 1937 and 1969. In each time span, the low P/E did better than the
market and the high P/E stocks did worse.
In their legendary paper,
“Cross-section of Expected Stock Returns”,
Journal of
Finance, 1992,
Eugene Fama and Kenneth French
reported results similar to
Benjamin Graham’s findings. Several studies before and after the Fama-French study
also point towards the outperformance of out-of-favor stocks.
In “Analyzing
the analysts: When do recommendations add value?”,
Journal of
Finance 2004, Narasimhan Jegadeesh, Joonghyuk Kim, Susan D Krische and Charles
Lee have highlighted that naive adherence to the consensus recommendations can
be costly, because the "level" of the consensus recommendation adds value only
among stocks with favorable quantitative characteristics (that is, value stocks and
positive momentum stocks). In fact, among stocks with unfavorable quantitative
characteristics, higher consensus recommendations are associated with worse
subsequent returns.
In “Can
Investors Profit from the Prophets? Security Analyst Recommendations and
Stock Returns”,
Journal of Finance 2002, Brad Barber, Reuven Lehavy, Maureen
McNichols and Brett Trueman, highlight that stocks with the most favorable
recommendations outperform stocks with the least favorable recommendations. Our
findings are also on similar lines.
Refer to page 13,
(Contrarian investing:
What it is; why it works)
for details
Refer to Page 46-53 “Low
P/E stocks outperform high
P/E” for details
Refer to Page 23-26
“Neutral to moderately
popular stocks emerge
winners
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Contrarian investing: What it is; why it works
Amongst the multitudes of investment frameworks and styles which have worked,
one of the most interesting and least popular is Contrarian Investing. Going against
the grain and herd is not a common natural human instinct, be it investing or any
other domain. In investment parlance, Contrarian investing, in simple terms, is an
investment style which goes against the prevailing market consensus and is
characterized by buying and selling against the prevailing market sentiment. It has
some similarity with value investing as both contrarian and value investors are
hunting for price-value mismatch. However, value investing focuses mostly on
valuations and its overarching priority is to look for valuation mismatch vs. intrinsic
value of the company. Contrarian investing can also encompass several qualitative
aspects (market sentiments, macros, expectations) along with the quantitative
parameters of valuations.
Jesse Livermore, one of the greatest stock traders of all time, has remarked, “Wall
Street never changes. The pockets change, the stocks change, but Wall Street
never changes because human nature never changes”.
What he said decades ago
holds true today as well! Contrarian investing works on the same premise.
“Contrarian
investing is an investment strategy that is characterized by investing in
stocks which are out of favor with the crowd or market. A contrarian investor
believes that certain crowd behavior like irrational exuberance, overreaction, and
human limitation as a forecaster can lead to certain mispricing’s in stock market
which can be exploited in a consistent and systematic manner”.
Our evidence from
India suggests the same.
Investor enthusiasm or crowd herding often causes popular stocks to become
overpriced. Similarly, lack of investor enthusiasm often dumps unpopular stocks into
the bargain basement. Earnings and other surprises result in re-evaluation of both
groups and more realistic pricing. Contrarian investing focuses on buying stocks
dumped into the bargain basement. Some contrarian strategies are:
1. Buying stocks with low price-to-earnings
2. Buying stocks with low price-to-book
3. Buying stocks with low price-to-cash-flow
4. Buying neutral-to-moderately-popular stocks (popularity based on consensus
rating*)
Evidence from India shows that the companies the market expects the best future
for (as reflected in high price-to-earnings or high price-to-cash-flow) often
underperform, while the companies the market expects the worst future for (as
reflected in low price-to-earnings or low price-to-cash-flow) often outperform.
As early as the 1840s, in his remarkable book,
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and
the Madness of Crowd,
Charles Mackay observed: “We find that whole communities
suddenly fix their minds upon one object and go mad in its pursuit; that millions of
people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion, and run after it…Sober
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
nations have all at once become desperate gamblers and risked almost their
existence upon the turn of piece of paper …Men, it has been well said, think in herds
…go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly and one by one.”
This is the case in the stock market, as well – investors get fixated with some
popular stocks. As investors crowd around these popular stocks, they become
overpriced, and as evidenced in this study, fail to deliver returns.
We delve into facets of human behavior, heuristics and biases, which explain the
success of contrarian investing.
Investor overreaction hypothesis (IOH)
The investor overreaction hypothesis (IOH) states that investors overreact to certain
events in a consistent and predictable manner. Some key predictions of IOH are:
1. Investors will continuously overvalue favored stocks and undervalue out-of-
favor stocks.
2. Investors will find themselves over-optimistic on forecasts of the “best” stocks
and too pessimistic on those of the “worst” stocks over time.
3. Absolute contrarian strategies provide superior returns over time.
4. Out-of-favor stocks as valued by at least three major fundamental
measurements – low price-to-earnings, low price-to-cash-flow and low price-to-
book-value – will outperform the market as a group over longer periods of time,
normally 5-10 years or more.
5. Favored stocks as measured by high price-to-earnings, high price-to-cash-flow
and high price-to-book ratios will underperform the market over the same time
periods.
6. IOH posits that the outperformance of out-of-favor stocks and the
underperformance of favorites are caused primarily by behavioral influences
(affect, cognitive heuristics, neuroeconomics and other psychological variables).
As implicitly stated in IOH, it is not only in manias, contagion and panic that this
predictable overreaction occurs. We see this consistently in normal market settings.
As we will see across themes, the “best” stocks (those with the most promising
prospects by various yardsticks) underperform as a group as compared to “out-of-
favor” stocks.
And that’s why contrarian investing works successfully!
Human limitation as a forecaster – overconfidence bias and over-optimism
The consistent underperformance of the best stocks comes from investors’ and
analysts’ over-confidence in their ability to predict earnings accurately, though
empirical evidence proves that this cannot be done.
Consider for instance, the Nifty constituents, all well-tracked companies on which a
plethora of information is easily available. We juxtaposed the forecasted aggregate
earnings growth for the Nifty against the actual earnings growth for the last eight
years. We found significant over-optimism on earnings growth towards the start of
the year, which tapers off towards the end of the fiscal year, and the forecasts are
quite off the mark, even towards the end of the fiscal year.
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
If the magnitude of error is so high for the most actively tracked companies, the
error would probably be much larger for companies outside the Nifty. The market
would be more likely to punish high-multiple stocks, for which expectations are
much more than low-multiple stocks, from which expectations are muted.
Our study highlights that trailing multiples are better predictor of future
performance as compared to forward estimates, which emphasizes human
limitation as a forecaster.
Exhibit 5: Nifty earnings growth (%) – actual v/s consensus estimates
Estimate
(12 months prior)
18.9
11.9
25.1
19.3
17.2
23.9
17.1
22.0
20.7
19.6
Estimate
(3 months prior)
5.8
7.6
25.4
8.9
14.1
16.2
18.0
15.4
17.7
14.3
Actual
-13.4
7.8
25.8
7.1
2.9
14.5
-5.1
-0.7
10.8
5.5
Source: Bloomberg
FY09
FY10
FY11
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY17
Average
Combining this with IOH which states that crowd consistently overvalues favorite
stocks, such an overvaluation with the over optimism of analysts to predict the
earnings hits them much harder as compared to the other stocks. Simply put it,
“negative earnings surprise would affect these stocks much more as compared to
other stocks”.
Human biases and heuristics
Affect:
Our strong likes, dislikes and opinions, experienced feelings such as
happiness, sadness, excitement and fear, can consciously or unconsciously, heavily
influence our decision-making process. Affect can cause behavior to move many
standard deviations away from the norm. So, our own preference for sports might
prompt us to invest in a sports company as compared to a radio company, which
appears dull to us but the radio company might be a better investment.
Availability bias:
Availability bias is a behavioral concept that describes how our
environment can shape our perceptions. Our perceptions are heavily influenced by
what is personally most relevant, recent or dramatic, which represent only a part of
the complete economic picture. For example, a person whose home has lost 20% of
its market value and whose spouse endured a long period of unemployment is less
likely to see or feel an economic recovery even while housing markets show signs of
recovery and unemployment ticks down.
Anchoring and hindsight biases:
The other two systematic heuristic biases that tend
to cause investment errors are anchoring bias and hindsight bias. These biases also
reinforce the others.
Anchoring
is a simplifying heuristic that sets up a price for a
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
stock that is not far removed from its current trading price as its anchor. The
heuristic process tends to drop the anchor far too close to the stock’s current price
and investors don’t seem to believe that price can go either much lower if they want
to sell or much higher if they want to buy; this often leads to missed opportunities.
The inevitability of what happened seems obvious in retrospect.
Hindsight
bias
seriously impairs proper assessment of past errors and significantly limits what can
be seen from experience.
2007-2008: Could the crash have been foreseen?
In his book, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowd, Charles
Mackay had remarked in 1840,
“Men,
it has been well said, think in herds ……go
mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly and one by one”.
Fast
forward 168 years, did a similar thing happen in December 2007? Can crowd
behavior led to bubbles and manias?
Consider Exhibit-6. The expectation (P/B) attached by the investor to return on
equity (RoE) was mindboggling in December 2007. A crash was imminent (in
hindsight?), as the valuations were extremely high. Even in the months prior to
December 2007, the valuations were stretched, but the herd didn’t budge!
Exhibit 6: Herd behavior evident in 2007-2008 – Nifty P/B (trailing) v/s RoE
Market Price to Book Ratio(trailing) Vs Return on Equity
7.0
6.0
5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
13
16
19
22
Dec-08
Undervalued
y = 0.1859x + 0.284R² = 0.661
25
28
Source: NSE
Valuations haven’t yet reached the
stratospheric levels of Dec’07. RoE is
lower today but so is Cost of Equity.
Current
Mar-15
Overvalued
In the earlier peak of Dec’07,
RoE was much higher.
Dec-07
As things stand today, valuations haven’t yet reached the stratospheric levels of
December 2007. While RoE is lower for the aggregates vis-à-vis December 2007, the
P/B multiple is also lower. In the previous peak of December 2007, valuations kept
on rising, accompanied by expanding RoE. If the past is anything to go by, then we
can see expansion in P/B multiples even from the current levels, if earnings growth
recovers and capital efficiency ratios improve. Another difference vis-à-vis
December 2007 is in the cost of capital – it is lower today, and thus, supportive of
relatively rich valuation multiples.
Move to a different geography – the US, a year before crash! In the housing bubble
in the US, which evolved into the Global Financial Crisis, excessive use of leverage
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
played a massive role in destruction of wealth. The world’s smartest investors and
rating agencies that rated the mortgages were all caught in mania!
In his book, Charles Mackay highlights the
Dutch Tulip Mania.
In 1637, investors
scrambled to buy tulips, paying the equivalent of USD75, 000 for a Semper
Augustus, a rare bulb. Then, suddenly, the price collapsed to a miniscule fraction of
this. The question is: how does something so valuable suddenly become worthless?
There was no disruptive technology or substitute! Rationality definitely goes for a
toss!
Human behavior has been remarkably similar across different geographies and time.
In 1637, investors overreacted to events and then corrected their original reaction,
causing a major reversal in price. In December 2008, the Nifty was at deep discount
– investors had overreacted; normalcy returned thereafter.
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Consensus recommendations
1
Popularity as the selection criterion
Does stock popularity with analyst has a meaningful
impact on stock’s performance?
2
Consensus Sell rating (%) as the selection criterion
Sell recommendations are not as common as buy/hold
recommendations, and possess scarcity value.
3
Consensus Buy rating (%) as the selection criterion
With the scarcity value theme of consensus sell ratings
playing out well, we put to test the street’s capability
to predict the winners.
4
Consensus recommendation change from “Net sell”
to “Net buy”
Valuation
1
2
P/E
P/B
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
What is stock popularity?
In this report, we have tried to analyze whether a stock’s popularity with the
consensus can tell us about its market price performance. Bloomberg collects
analyst recommendations on each stock and assigns a consensus rating based on
these recommendations. It assigns 5 points for every buy recommendation, 3 points
for every hold recommendation and 1 point for every sell recommendation. A
consensus rating is arrived by taking the average of these scores.
Consensus
Recommendations
A stock with a consensus rating of 5 would have all buy recommendations.
A stock with a consensus rating of 3 would have equal number of sell and buy
recommendations, apart from hold/neutral recommendations.
A stock with a rating change from <3 to >3 has a recommendation change from
a net sell to a net buy.
A stock with a consensus rating of 1 would have all sell recommendations.
Consensus sell rating (%) of a stock is number of Sell recommendations/Total
recommendations.
Consensus buy rating (%) of a stock is number of Buy recommendations/Total
recommendations
We have used the consensus rating of a stock as a measure of its popularity.
A
stock with a consensus rating of 5 is very popular with analysts, whereas a stock
with a consensus rating of 1 is very unpopular. A stock with a consensus rating of 3
is termed as neutral.
Exhibit 7: Stock popularity of 30 largest companies ordered by popularity with analysts
Consensus rating of 30 largest stocks of BSE100
100%
75%
50%
25%
0%
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Buy(%)
Consensus rating(rhs)
5.0
3.8
2.5
1.3
0.0
Source: Bloomberg
Amongst these largest 30 companies,
ITC
is trading at relatively attractive valuations
(32x FY18E EPS; at a significant discount to its FMCG peers). Cigarette volume
growth has been resilient despite demonetization while GST has been a positive
event for ITC. Earnings predictability and cigarette volume resilience coupled with
valuation discount to the sector has resulted in the stock being the most popular
large cap name on the street as per consensus popularity score.
HDFC Bank
remains one of the most popular stocks, given its solid earnings growth
led by consistent market share gains (value migration from public to private sector
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
banks), pristine asset quality and unparalleled track record of multiple years of 20%+
earnings growth. HDFC Bank is one of our long-term picks in the BFSI space.
M&M
has seen improvement in its popularity, as it is widely expected to be the key
beneficiary of improving rural consumption prospects on the back of second
consecutive year of normal monsoon. The management’s upbeat guidance on
tractor volume growth coupled with potential recovery in UV market share is also
driving the overall bullish sentiment on the stock. M&M, Tata Motors and Maruti
are our preferred bets in the Auto sector.
ICICI Bank
has seen improvement in its consensus popularity scores post 4QFY17
results.
Overall pool of stressed loans is showing signs of stability, and bulk of NPA
recognition is happening from the watch list and OSRL. The government and RBI’s
sense of urgency
for resolution of lumpy stressed loans is also providing comfort at
the margin.
Among the corporate-oriented private sector banks, the street’s
preference has tilted towards ICICI Bank.
Asian Paints
has seen erosion in its consensus popularity scores largely owing to a
combination of lifetime high valuations (42x FY19E EPS) coupled with moderating
Decorative Paints volume growth. Implementation of GST could also impact
performance in 1HFY18.
The IT sector is facing multiple headwinds: margin pressure in traditional services
along with protectionist impetus in the US, which makes
TCS
and
Wipro
one of the
least popular stocks, with consensus popularity score of 2.6-3.
Macroeconomic issues (sharp INR depreciation) in key export markets including
Nigeria and Egypt, absence from the scooter segment (higher growth than
motorcycles), and continued impact of demonetization on two-wheeler volumes
have rendered a neutral consensus recommendation for
Bajaj Auto.
Elevated slippages, weak business outlook and expected pressure on core income
have led to
Axis Bank’s
drop in popularity.
June 2017
20

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Analyzing themes based on consensus recommendations
For our study, we have divided the BSE-100 into five quintiles (groups of 20), based
on different selection criterion. We have begun with the December 2006 quarter,
and have re-balanced the quintiles quarterly, based on criterion/theme.
As a next step, we have evaluated the absolute total returns (including dividends) of
each quintile and compared these with the returns from the BSE-100. This exercise
has given us important insights for stock selection.
1
Central theme: Popularity as the selection criterion
This is the central theme of our study. The BSE-100 Index constituents have been
divided into quintiles based on popularity score, with Quintile-1 being composed of
the highest popularity stocks and so on. This has been done for each quarter starting
December 2006 and the total returns from each quintile have been evaluated.
Neutral to moderately popular stocks (Quintile-4) performed the best, followed by
the most popular stocks (Quintile-1, and then, Quintile-2). The least popular stocks
(Quintile-5) and those in Quintile-3 were perennial underperformers, rarely beating
the benchmark.
As a part of our analysis, we
have divided BSE100 in 5
groups of 20-Quintile1 (Q1),
Quintile2 (Q2), Quintile3
(Q3), Quintile4 (Q4) and
Quintile5 (Q5) respectively
with Q1 being composed of
most popular stocks and so
on.
Exhibit 8: Popularity of different quintiles
Popularity of Quintiles
5.4
4.8
4.1
3.5
2.8
2.2
1.5
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
Source: Bloomberg
2
Associated theme-1: Consensus Sell rating (%) as the selection criterion
While analyzing the central theme, we noticed the scarcity value in sell
recommendations. Sell recommendations are not as common as buy/hold
recommendations, and could be a meaningful indicator of stock performance.
Once again, we created quintiles from the BSE-100, this time based on consensus
sell ratings (%), with Quintile-1 being composed of stocks with the highest
consensus sell ratings and so on. We started this from the December 2006 quarter
and rebalanced the quintiles every quarter since.
June 2017
21

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 9: Scarcity of SELL ratings aids the performance of Consensus SELL rated stocks
85
70
55
40
25
10
%
Proportion of buy/sell/hold ratings among BSE100 Stocks
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
56
24
19
Source: Bloomberg
It was interesting to find that Quintile-1(quintile composed of stocks with highest
Sell ratings) underperformed the rest of the quintiles, underscoring our thesis that
stocks with Consensus Sell rating performs in line with recommendation given the
scarcity of Sell ratings on the street. Quintile-5 (quintile of stocks with lowest Sell
ratings) delivered the best returns among five quintiles.
3
Associated theme-2: Consensus Buy rating (%) as the selection criterion
With the scarcity value theme of consensus sell ratings playing out well, we put to
test the street’s capability to predict the winners. We created quintiles from the
BSE-100, this time based on consensus buy ratings (%), with Quintile-1 being
composed of stocks with the highest consensus buy ratings and so on.
The results of this exercise closely mimic the results thrown up by the popularity
theme.
The top two quintiles along with Quintile-4 delivered good returns, whereas
Quintile-3 and Quintile-5 underperformed the market. Quintile-4 was the winner
portfolio and had a significant overlap with Quintile-4 of the popularity theme.
June 2017
22

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
1
Neutral to moderately popular stocks emerge winners
With popularity as the selection criterion for creating quintiles of BSE-100, quintiles
were created for each quarter and rebalanced quarterly. The 4
th
quintile comprises
of stocks which are neutral to moderately popular which reflects in the consensus
rating history of the 4
th
quintile.
Popularity of a stock is calculated as
average of the ratings assigned to it by
the street. Bloomberg assigns 5 points
for every Buy rating, 3 for Hold and 1
for Sell rating.
A stock with a consensus rating of
5 would have all buy
recommendations.
A stock with a consensus rating of
3 would have an equal number of
sell and buy recommendations,
apart from hold/neutral
recommendations.
A stock with a consensus rating of
1 would have all sell
recommendations.
Quintiles for Popularity were
created such that Quintile 1 has
the 20 stocks with the highest
Popularity, Quintile 2 has next 20
stocks and so on such that Quintile
5 has the 20 stocks with the least
popularity.
Exhibit 10: Quintile 4 is a mix of neutral to moderately popular stocks
4.10
3.70
3.30
2.90
2.50
Popularity of 4th Quintile
3.37
Source: Bloomberg
On average measure, Quintile-4 has performed the best, followed by Quintile-1 and
Quintile-2. Quintile-5 (the least popular stocks) and Quintile-3 have performed the
worst. While average is an investable metric, median represents the quintile
behavior more precisely. We achieved similar results with median measure!
Exhibit 11: Stocks on which analysts are neutral to moderately positive have performed best
500
400
300
200
100
0
Absolute Total returns (Average
)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100 by popularity ( quarterly rebalance)
Most Popular(CAGR-14.8%)
Q2(CAGR-13.5%)
Q3(CAGR-5.6%)
Q4(CAGR-16.0%)
Q5(CAGR-6.9%)
BSE100(CAGR-10.2%)
458.0
405.6
372.0
269.6
198.0
174.8
Source: Bloomberg
INR1k invested in Quintile-4 in December 2006 would be worth INR4.58k today.
INR1k invested in Quintile-1 in December 2006 would be worth INR4.06k today.
INR1k invested in Quintile-2 in December 2006 would be worth INR3.72k today.
INR1k invested in Quintile-5 in December 2006 would be worth INR1.98k today.
INR1k invested in Quintile-3 in December 2006 would be worth INR1.75k today.
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 12: Story remains intact at median measure as well
450
350
250
150
50
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100 by popularity ( quarterly rebalance)
Most Popular
Quintile 2
Absolute Total returns (Median
)
Quintile 3
Neutral to moderately popular
Quintile 5
357.3
296.4
228.9
141.6
98.6
Source: Bloomberg
From Dec-2006 till date, BSE-100 has delivered a return of 10.2% per annum. If we
look at the performance of the quintiles, Quintile-4 beats the benchmark
convincingly.
Following a simple strategy of investing in Quintile-4 (neutral to
moderately popular stocks) could generate a significant alpha over the benchmark.
In “Analyzing
the analysts: When do recommendations add value?”,
Journal of
Finance 2004, Narasimhan Jegadeesh, Joonghyuk Kim, Susan D Krische and Charles
Lee have highlighted that naive adherence to the consensus recommendations can
be costly, because the "level" of the consensus recommendation adds value only
among stocks with favorable quantitative characteristics (that is, value stocks and
positive momentum stocks). In fact, among stocks with unfavorable quantitative
characteristics, higher consensus recommendations are associated with worse
subsequent returns.
Our findings confirm this and also establish that neutral stocks have even
outperformed the most popular stocks as well as benchmark – evident in exhibits 10-
13.
The most popular and second-most popular groups of stocks (Quintile-1 and
Quintile-2) also beat the benchmark. The least popular stocks (Quintile-5) and stocks
in Quintile-3 fail to beat the benchmark.
In “Can
Investors Profit from the Prophets? Security Analyst Recommendations and
Stock Returns”,
Journal of Finance 2002, Brad Barber, Reuven Lehavy, Maureen
McNichols and Brett Trueman, highlight that stocks with the most favorable
recommendations outperform stocks with the least favorable recommendations. Our
findings are also on similar lines. As evident from exhibits 10-13, the most popular
stocks (Quintile-1) have outperformed the least popular stocks
June 2017
24

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 13: Stocks in quintile 4 have returned significant alpha across all time horizons
175
140
105
70
35
0
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
BSE100
Source: Bloomberg
Average Price appreciation of quintiles across different time horizons
1-year
2-year
3-year
5-year
7-year
As apparent, neutral to moderately popular stocks (Q4) has beaten the benchmark
on all time horizons. Additionally, most popular and 2
nd
most popular Quintile have
also beaten the BSE 100 benchmark returns, which allows us to categorize BSE 100
constituents in 60 winners and 40 Losers.
Exhibit 14: Existing BSE100 constituents divided in five quintiles as per popularity
Q4
SUNP
GNP
BHFC
CLGT
UNSP
BOB
AXSB
BOS
HUVR
SIEM
BHIN
NEST
BJAUT
DABUR
BHEL
PNB
ACEM
HZ
RPWR
IDEA
Q1
RCAPT
HDIL
ARBP
ITC
VEDL
HDFCB
HNDL
FB
MM
NTPC
ICICIBC
PWGR
UPLL
IIB
TTMT
SBIN
EIM
INFO
MSIL
HCLT
Q2
YES
RELI
TTCH
GMRI
LT
ONGC
HDFC
IOCL
BRIT
COAL
TECHM
IHFL
AL
POWF
JSP
Z
TATA
BHARTI
EXID
ADSEZ
Q3
RECL
SHTF
GAIL
BPCL
HPCL
RIL
BAF
MSS
LPC
CDH
TGBL
JSTL
KMB
UTCEM
GRASIM
MMFS
KKC
TTAN
LICHF
HMCL
Q5
NMDC
APNT
CIPLA
TPWR
SAIL
RCOM
UNBK
BOI
CBK
ABB
ACC
GCPL
TCS
MRCO
WPRO
UBBL
DIVI
DRRD
DLFU
IDBI
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
Amongst the current constituents of the BSE 100, we note that Quintile-4 (Q4) has
popularity scores of 3-3.45. We are highlighting Sun Pharma, Axis Bank, Bajaj Auto,
Colgate and PNB as our contrarian Buy ideas based on popularity metrics.
June 2017
25

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
An important question remains unanswered!
Why does the quintile composed of
stocks that have low consensus ratings/popularity (Quintile-4) outperform all the
other quintiles, even bettering the performance of the most popular stocks?
This is because the investment thesis of the most popular stocks is quite popular,
making them more likely to be discussed in the market. And, as such, there are
fewer marginal buyers with time. On the other hand, neutral to moderately popular
stocks are usually neglected by the street and their drivers are evolving. As the
drivers evolve, there is a sudden surge in investor interest in such stocks, leading to
a spike in returns. Thus, the stocks that were previously neglected by investors
deliver significant outperformance.
On the other hand, the least popular stocks underperform. This is because the least
popular stocks have a lot of sell recommendations. Sell recommendations are not
popular on the street – only about 19% of recommendations are sell as against
556% buy and 24% hold. So, they have scarcity value and are more likely to be acted
on (exhibit 21). We delve on this aspect in greater detail later in this report.
Quintile-4 offers higher dividend yield than market, which provides a downside
protection, but the difference is only marginal, which prompts us to look at the
beta
of the quintiles to explain the outperformance of Quintile-4. This is of particular
interest for Qunitile-1 and Quintile-4.
Exhibit 15: Quintile 1, 2 and 4 offer higher yields than market, but only marginally
%
14.6
Performance of Quintiles
13.7
Total Returns
16.0
12.0
5.6
1.7
Q1
Q2
1.7
4.0
1.6
Q3
Q4
14.3
10.2
6.9
1.7
Q5
5.5
1.4
Market
Source: Bloomberg
1.5
8.7
Price Returns
Dividend Returns
12.9
Quintile-1 seems to have higher beta than Quintile-4 but the returns delivered by
Quintile-1 stocks are lower. This tests the efficacy of EMH, which suggests that in
order to deliver higher returns, one must take higher risk. However, the difference in
beta is not very high, which prompts us to look at the up-capture and down-capture
ratios. These capture up-market and down-market separately, overcoming the
shortcomings of beta.
Exhibit 16: Quintile-1 seems to have higher beta than Quintile-4, but lags on returns
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.0
0.8
Quintile 1
Quintile 4
Beta of Quintiles
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
26

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Up-capture and down-capture
Up-capture measures the percentage of market gains captured by a manager when
the markets are up. Down-capture measures the percentage of market losses
endured by a manager when the markets are down.
The two elements that drive the market are “greed” and “fear”. The up-capture and
down-capture ratios are a useful way of separating the two, so they can be analyzed
independently. Also, up-capture and down-capture address the shortcomings of
beta, which fails to distinguish between up and down markets.
The
upside capture ratio
should be greater than 100, indicating that when the
market is up, the portfolio on an average, has done even better. The higher the up-
capture, the better is the performance of the portfolio.
Alternatively, the
downside capture ratio
should be less than 100, meaning that
when the market is down, the manager has caught only a fraction of the losses. The
lower the down-capture, the better is the performance of the portfolio.
Computation of up-capture and down-capture
For the up-capture, the first step is the identification of all periods in which the
market was up. For those up-market periods, the returns of both the portfolio and
the benchmark are geometrically compounded and then annualized.
Up Capture
=
n
p
= number of positive benchmark returns
s
k
= k-th positive benchmark return
r
i
= manager return for the same period as the i-th positive benchmark return
y
= number of years, counting periods of positive benchmark returns only
For the down-capture, the same process is repeated, but for the periods during
which the market was down.
June 2017
27

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 17: Up-capture and down-capture of quintiles (on quarterly return basis)
160
140
120
Down capture
60
80
80
60
Source: Bloomberg
100
100
Q3
Q5
120
140
Up capture
Q4
Q2
Q1
The neutral stocks (Quintile-4) have high upside capture ratio, but what separates
them from the rest is their superior downside protection. Quintile-4 has the highest
up-capture ratio and the lowest down-capture ratio, which explains the
outperformance of Quintile-4 over all the other quintiles.
The quintiles Q3 and Q5 have the lowest up capture ratios( 87 and 102) respectively
which implies that they rise less/ equal to the market in periods when benchmark
has risen but have substantially higher down capture ratios(111 and 122)
respectively, which implies that these groups perform worse than market in case of
market downturn.
The characteristics exhibited by these quintiles are exactly opposite to
characteristics exhibited by neutral to moderately popular stocks (Q4) having up
capture of 134 and down capture of 108. What’s also quite apparent that, none of
the quintile had a desirable down capture of less than 100!
Exhibit 18: Neutral stocks have superior downside protection
Q1
Upside capture ratio
Downside capture ratio
139
121
Q2
132
119
Q3
87
111
Q4
134
108
Q5
102
122
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
28

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Quintile-4 is best on risk-reward metric
Additionally, we have calculated average return per standard deviation of returns of
members comprising the quintile. Standard deviation is a measure of risk and
average return/standard deviation can be seen as a measure of return per unit of
risk.
Exhibit 19: Average Return/Standard Deviation for Quintile-1 and Quintile-4
Quintile 1
All Returns
Positive Returns
Negative Returns
0.13
0.65
-0.69
Quintile 4
0.20
0.85
-0.56
Source: Bloomberg
The findings are similar to what we observed in up-capture and down-capture
ratios. Quintile-4 beats all other quintiles on risk-adjusted returns. Its higher return
per standard deviation implies that the risk-reward ratio is better for Quintile-4.
Exhibit 20: Quintile-4 is best positioned on risk adjusted returns basis
2.5
1.5
0.5
-0.5
-1.5
-2.5
Average Returns/Standard deviation
Quintile 1
Quintile 4
Source: Bloomberg
The relative outperformance of the neutral stocks can be explained by the robust
outperformance of these stocks both during up markets and down markets. When
the market is up, they gain the most compared with other quintiles. When the
market is down, they lose the least. The probable reason is that expectations from
these stocks are muted; so, they deliver significant returns in case of an earnings
surprise.
We attribute the success of Quintile-4 (neutral to moderately-popular stocks) to the
fact that this quintile captures stocks just upgraded by the street (from a sell/neutral
consensus rating).
This prompted us to look at all those stocks upgraded by the street, and particularly,
those upgraded
from a “net sell to a net buy” (consensus rating change from <3 to
>3),
as these are the stocks forming Quintile-4 and would be part of Qunitile-4 in the
future as well. Among all the strategies outlined on the report, this strategy has
delivered the best performance.
June 2017
29

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Final thoughts: Is consensus change significant?
We looked at instances of change in consensus rating from ‘net sell’ to ‘net buy’ over
2006-2017 across BSE-100 constituents. A change in consensus rating from ‘net sell’
to ‘net buy’ means a change in consensus rating from <3 to >3. We found that a
strategy of investing in stocks with consensus rating change from <3 (net sell) to >3
(net buy) yields better results than any other strategy discussed in this study.
Essentially, these are stocks that (a) have been ignored, (b) have negative news flow
associated with them, or (c) are battling short-to-medium-term challenges. Thus,
typically they have consensus popularity rating <3. However, marginal earnings
surprise, improvement in news flow, and beaten-down valuations are some of the
factors that result in popularity scores moving closer to and then over 3 (Net Buy).
These stocks are yet to become over-owned/most popular names on the street
(Quintile-1 of the popularity thesis discussed in earlier sections).
By investing in stocks for which consensus recommendation has changed from ‘net
sell’ to ‘net buy’ as soon as they have been upgraded, and then holding them for 12
months, an investor would have earned an average return of 24.1%.
Exhibit 21: Indexed return over next 12 months from “Net sell to Net buy” Change
132
124
116
108
100
t
t+1
t+2
t+3
t+4
t+5
t+6
t+7
t+8
t+9
t+10
t+11
t+12
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
Avg. Return of stocks(consensus change from Net sell to Net Buy)
124.1
We found this strategy to be effective across the entire time horizon. The lowest
return delivered by the strategy across the time period was -5.7% in 2007, impacted
by 2008 global financial crisis (GFC).
June 2017
30

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 22: Returns have been significant across all years (2003-2016)
Average Returns
No. of companies
76.3
52.1
41
32.5
14
8
25.6
11
42.0
37
26
17
2.5
10.9
4.7
22
21
18.0
17
25.9
9
12.0
1
-5.7
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
We highlight that the investment was done after the stock’s popularity rating
changed from <3 to >3, that is, from Net Sell to Net Buy (and not Consensus Buy).
Qualitatively, it suggests that when consensus recognizes the changing fortunes of
underlying business and upgrades ratings, it pays to be among the early birds in
investing in such a business. Our study shows that returns earned from this strategy
are healthy even in absolute terms. However, one needs to move quickly, certainly
before the stock becomes a Consensus Buy and crosses a popularity score of 3.5.
We applied this framework on BSE 100 constituents. Below is a snapshot of stocks
where the consensus popularity score has changed from <3 to >3.
Exhibit 23: Stocks where popularity has improved from <3 to >3, recently
Company
BHEL
Nestle India
Punjab Natl. Bank
Siemens
Idea Cellular
Ambuja Cement
Mar'17
2.4
2.7
2.6
2.2
2.9
2.8
Apr'17
2.4
2.7
2.6
2.4
2.9
2.9
May'17
2.2
2.5
2.6
2.6
2.8
3.0
June'17
3.0
3.1
3.0
3.2
3.0
3.0
Needless to say, this metric has thrown names where a healthy degree of skepticism
exists, and therefore, they do not appear in the list of stocks with fundamentally
positive investment thesis. For example:
BHEL:
Future growth potential of thermal energy in India is being debated even
as BHEL’s slow-moving order book constricts its earnings performance.
Nestle:
Five years of low volume growth and loss in market share in key
categories has hindered the long-term positive narrative around the stock.
PNB:
Asset quality issues hampering the entire PSU Banks pack.
Siemens:
Delay in recovery of private capex cycle.
Idea Cellular:
Internecine price competition in the Telecom sector, which is
witnessing heightened competitive intensity.
Ambuja Cements:
Consistent earnings underperformance vis-à-vis large cap
peers in the sector.
June 2017
31

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Cases based on
popularity theme
We looked at the
performance of Quintile-4,
the quintile with neutral to
moderately popular stocks.
Quintile-4 has delivered
significant returns
accompanied by consensus
upgrade. Based on recent
history, we present
Ashok
Leyland, Kotak Mahindra
Bank, Dabur, Exide
Industries, Asian Paints
and Hindalco
as case
studies.
June 2017
32

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Case study: 1
Ashok Leyland
Exhibit 24: Popularity of Ashok Leyland
4.5
Exit from 4Q
Entry in 4Q
As the business outlook for Ashok Leyland
improved, so did the consensus ratings. From
a ‘net sell’ in the previous months, the stock
was upgraded to a ‘net buy’ in May 2014. It
entered Quintile-4 (neutral to moderately
popular stocks) in the quarterly rebalancing in
June 2014 and exited the quintile at the end of
September 2015. While it was in Quintile-4, it
significantly outperformed the BSE-100.
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
3.2
3.8
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 25: Ashok Leyland – upgrade from ‘net sell’ to ‘net buy’ delivered
Post the downturn in the CV cycle, Ashok
strong returns
Leyland emerged leaner and stronger. It
Net buy(%)
Buy(%)
Ashok Leyland
100
focused on generating cash and curtailing
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
80
debt by cutting working capital, controlling
60
capex, and monetizing non-core assets.
40
Leverage reduced and so did interest costs.
20
With the CV cycle turning up in 2HFY15, Ashok
0
Leyland, being a pure play CV player,
-20
Strong
performed well. Its M&HCV market share
-40
increased to a decadal high supported by
operating leverage, lower RM costs and
favorable product mix, Ashok Leyland’s
Source: Bloomberg
EBITDA margin expanded to a 10-quarter high
in 4QFY15. The stock significantly
Exhibit 26: Ashok Leyland – indexed returns
outperformed market indices.
Ashok Leyland
BSE100
290
Indexed Returns
254.3
Stock performance:
Over the 15-month
period, June 2014 to September 2015, while
the BSE-100 delivered 6.3% return, Ashok
Leyland delivered 154.3% return, generating
significant alpha. Even with 5% allocation in an
equal-weighted portfolio of 20 stocks
(Quintile-4 is a group of 20 stocks), it alone
delivered 7.4% alpha.
240
190
140
90
106.3
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
33

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Case study: 2
Kotak Mahindra Bank (KMB)
Exhibit 27: Popularity of KMB
4.5
Kotak Mahindra Bank (KMB) entered Quintile-
4 (neutral to moderately popular stocks) in
September 2013 and remained in this quintile
till June 2016, barring the quarter ended
March 2015. The stock had been a ‘net sell’
for a number of years, barring sporadic
instances. Once it became a ‘net buy’ in
September 2013, it delivered significant
outperformance over BSE-100.
With healthy capitalization (CET1: 17-18%),
improved liability profile, robust risk
management system (stress loans at just 2%),
and strong presence across loan products,
KMB was well placed for the growth cycle. As
macroeconomic conditions improved, KMB
did well – it’s NPAs reduced and Banking
business profit increased, driven by loans and
fee. Additionally, the merger of ING Vysya
Bank (VYSB) with KMB in FY15-16 delivered
strategic benefits. While KMB had a strong
presence in the North and the West (80% of
KMB branches) at that time, it made deep
inroads into the South with the merger (64%
of VYSB branches).
Stock performance:
The stock significantly
outperformed the broader indices during its
consensus upgrade cycle. Over the 21 months,
September 2013 to June 2016, the BSE-100
delivered 53% return; KMB delivered 125%
return. In an equal-weighted portfolio of 20
stocks in Quintile-4, KMB alone contributed an
alpha of 3.6%.
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
Entry in Q4
Exit from Q4
3.9
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 28: KMB upgrade from ‘net sell’ to ‘net buy’ delivered strong
returns
70
50
30
10
-10
-30
Net buy(%)
Sell(%)
Buy(%)
Hold(%)
Kotak Mahindra Bank
Strong upgrade
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 29: KMB – indexed returns; outperformed BSE-100 by 72% over
September 2013-June 2016
250
210
170
130
90
Indexed Returns
KMB
BSE100
225.5
153.1
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
34

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Case study: 3
Dabur India
Exhibit 30: Popularity of Dabur
4.2
4.0
Exit from Q4
Dabur became a part of Quintile-4 in
December 2014 and exited at the end of June
2016. The stock saw moderate upgrades
during this period and outperformed the
broader market.
‘Net buys’ on the stock reduced significantly
before December 2014 due to slowdown in
consumer demand and then saw moderate
recovery in ‘net buys’, with a couple of ‘holds’
changing to ‘buys’.
During the period December 2014 to June
2016, Dabur’s consistent volume delivery in an
overall weak macro scenario was impressive,
underscoring its portfolio strength and carry-
over benefits of distribution expansion. New
initiatives on distribution ramp-up in the
urban chemist channel and recovery in
Namaste helped earnings grow. This led to
some rating upgrades on the street and the
stock price moved up in tandem with
earnings.
Stock performance:
While the BSE-100 moved
up 3% during this 18-month period, Dabur
moved up 33.4%, significantly outperforming
the benchmark. In an equal-weighted
portfolio of 20 stocks in Quintile-4, Dabur
alone contributed an alpha of 1.5%.
3.8
3.6
3.4
3.2
3.0
3.7
3.5
Entry into Q4
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 31: ‘Net buys’ on Dabur increased during the period December
2014 to June 2016
100
80
60
40
20
0
-20
Source: Bloomberg
Dabur
Net buy(%)
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Exhibit 32: Dabur – indexed returns; outperformed BSE-100 by 30% over
December 2014 – June 2016
140
128
116
104
92
80
Indexed Returns
DABUR
BSE100
133.4
103.0
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
35

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 33: Snapshot of Quintile-4 (neutral to moderately popular stocks)
CMP
Company
Hind. Unilever
Hero Motocorp
Titan Company
M & M Fin. Serv.
Bosch
Bank of Baroda
Bharti Infra.
Dabur India
Colgate-Palm.
Axis Bank
Bajaj Auto
Hind.Zinc
United Spirits
Cipla
Asian Paints
Ambuja Cem.
Tata Power Co.
ACC
Godrej Consumer
Popularity
score
3.18
3.46
3.50
3.51
3.18
3.24
3.13
3.05
3.26
3.19
3.08
3.00
3.25
2.86
2.88
3.00
2.85
2.65
2.65
(INR)
1094
3733
520
341
24277
165
375
290
1101
508
2840
253
2294
539
1164
244
82
1652
960
MCap
(INR B)
2367
746
462
193
762
381
711
511
299
1210
822
1067
333
434
1116
485
223
310
654
Trailing PE (x)
5-yr Avg. Current
40.1
21.2
40.6
18.0
47.7
7.9
29.9
39.3
41.7
14.4
19.6
9.6
110.2
31.0
49.6
29.3
93.2
29.2
40.4
55.7
22.1
57.6
48.1
51.3
27.6
25.2
40.0
51.9
33.1
21.5
12.8
85.8
33.9
55.4
50.0
16.0
49.0
50.8
PE
Prem/Disc
(%)
39.0
4.3
41.8
167.4
7.6
250.0
-15.4
1.7
24.5
129.0
9.8
34.0
-22.1
9.2
11.7
70.8
-82.9
67.6
25.7
FY17
42490
33771
8017
4002
14441
13831
27470
12769
5774
36793
38276
83162
3885
12766
20162
9703
13969
6343
12876
PAT (INR M)
FY18E
49312
39559
9123
7309
19859
43989
32343
13623
6977
56151
43513
91033
5428
16022
22184
13163
18253
8772
14842
FY19E
58367
40188
10784
9269
23692
57488
36882
16110
8450
98609
51569
100156
7530
20071
26318
14298
18951
11021
17001
PAT
CAGR (%)
FY17-19
11.2
6.0
10.4
32.3
17.9
60.8
10.3
8.1
13.5
38.9
10.4
6.4
24.7
16.3
9.3
13.8
10.7
20.2
9.7
ROE
(%)
FY17
65.6
35.7
20.6
6.4
15.8
4.1
16.2
28.4
50.4
6.9
25.3
24.4
21.3
10.2
28.5
5.0
11.2
7.5
24.6
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
June 2017
36

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
2
Consensus sells are significant underperformers
The underperformance of Quintile-5 (the least popular stocks) in the popularity
theme proves that owing to their scarcity value, sell recommendations can be quite
efficient in predicting stock performance. This scarcity value prompted us to look at
consensus sell ratings in isolation.
Once again, we constructed quintiles, this time based on sell recommendations as a
percentage of total recommendations. The intent was to explore how good the
consensus sell recommendations are. We found consensus sell ratings to be quite
right, if we take a longer term horizon!
Quintile-1, composed of stocks with the highest consensus sell ratings,
underperformed the market significantly. So, the consensus has been quite right in
predicting sells.
This can have meaningful implications for investors who can short-
sell stocks.
Exhibit 34: Quintile-1, with highest consensus sell ratings, is the biggest underperformer
500
400
300
200
100
0
Absolute Total returns(Average
)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100 by consensus sell rating ( quarterly rebalance)
Q1(CAGR-7.1%)
Q4(CAGR-10.7%)
Q2(CAGR-12.3%)
Q5(CAGR-14.8%)
Q3(CAGR-9.4%)
BSE100 CAGR(10.2%)
409.8
327.1
282.9
269.6
251.7
201.7
Source: Bloomberg
On the other hand, Quintile-5, composed of stocks with the least consensus sell
ratings, performed the best. It is important to note that a portfolio of stocks with
minimum sell ratings may not have many buys – the consensus could be crowded
with hold ratings, making it a portfolio of
neutral to moderately popular stocks.
Additionally, we observed that sell ratings were particularly scarce in 2004-2008.
Both Quintile-4 and Quintile-5 had zero sell ratings. So, we repeated the same
analysis from 2009, when Quintile-4 and Quintile-5 became materially different. The
thesis stayed unchanged!
June 2017
37

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
With the median measure as the basis of the performance, the results become even
clearer, with Quintile-1 underperforming and Quintile-5 outperforming!
Exhibit 35: Quintile-1 underperformed, while Quintile-5 was the best performer!
300
250
200
150
100
50
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100 by consensus sell rating ( quarterly rebalance)
Quintile 1
Quintile 3
Quintile 5
Quintile 2
Quintile 4
Absolute Total returns (Median
)
258.4
227.0
232.5
167.7
103.7
Source: Bloomberg
Consensus sell recommendations have reasonable efficacy! We present an example
based on the consensus sell rating theme, and then, put to test the efficacy of
consensus buy ratings.
We present below the snapshot of Quintile 1 of current BSE 100 constituents with
highest SELL Ratings and low popularity score.
Exhibit 36: Ten stocks with highest SELL ratings in BSE 100 – Quintile-1 of Consensus Sell
theme
Company
Divi's Lab.
Dr Reddy's Labs
DLF
TCS
ACC
Godrej Consumer
Marico
Cipla
Asian Paints
Wipro
Buy
5
10
1
16
12
12
11
16
12
10
Hold
3
12
6
12
9
9
14
8
8
21
Sell
10
23
7
26
19
19
20
19
14
21
% of Sell
ratings
56%
51%
50%
48%
48%
48%
44%
44%
41%
40%
Popularity
score
2.44
2.42
2.14
2.63
2.65
2.65
2.60
2.86
2.88
2.58
The list is dominated by companies from IT, Pharma and Consumer sectors. While IT
and Pharma are facing regulatory as well as business model evolution challenges,
the Consumer sector is characterized by peak valuations.
June 2017
38

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Case study: 4
Steel Authority of India (SAIL)
Exhibit 37: SAIL has been consistently downgraded over the last five years
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
Entry in Q1
Member till date
SAIL is a member of Quintile-1 from July 2011
till date. The stock has consistently been a net
sell and the consensus’ prediction of stock
performance has been correct.
Over 2003-13, a significant portion of SAIL’s
earnings was driven by its captive iron ore
advantage. As iron ore prices (and resultantly
steel prices) have since declined globally,
SAIL's competitive advantage has been
eroded. Its employee cost per ton and
operating cost are higher. Slow ramp-up of
capacities has also impacted SAIL's
performance. Eroding competitive advantage,
higher operating cost and weak project
execution are driving SAIL’s
underperformance.
Stock performance:
As apparent, SAIL has
significantly underperformed the benchmark
BSE100 Index (-49.3% vs. 81.7%).
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 38: SAIL – consensus rating has been “strong sell” for recent and
distant past
100
50
0
-50
-100
Net buy(%)
Sell(%)
Buy(%)
Hold(%)
SAIL
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 39: Sail has consistently underperformed indices
220
170
120
70
20
Indexed Returns
SAIL
BSE 100
181.7
50.7
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
39

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Consesus buys are not always great investments
3
To test the efficacy of consensus buy ratings, we constructed quintiles based on
buys as a percentage of total recommendations. We looked at the performance of
the quintiles and found that consensus buys are not necessarily great investments.
Quintile-4, the quintile with the second-lowest (in terms of percentage) consensus
buy ratings, delivered the maximum returns! Quintile-4 was followed by Quintile-2,
which was followed by Quintile-1. Quintile-4 has been the front runner, almost
through the entire decade!
Exhibit 40: Quintile-1 does well, but there is not much difference across top-4 quintiles
450
350
250
150
50
Absolute Total returns(Average
)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100 by consensus sell rating ( quarterly rebalance)
Q1(CAGR-11.7%)
Q3(CAGR-10.5%)
Q5(CAGR-7.1%)
Q2(CAGR-11.8%)
Q4(CAGR-14.6%)
BSE100(CAGR-10.2%)
404.9
314.1
309.5
278.1
269.6
201.6
Source: Bloomberg
So, contrarian investing does works with consensus buy recommendations. With
Quintile-4 emerging as the winner both in the popularity theme and the consensus
buy theme, we checked for how many stocks they have in common. We found the
number of common members in both these portfolios to be significantly high.
Exhibit 41: Number of common members across Quintile-4 (popularity) and Quintile-4
(consensus buy) is significantly high (65-75%)
Common members across Q4 of popularity and consensus buy theme
17.5
16.0
14.5
13.0
11.5
10.0
Source: Bloomberg
In a market characterized by preponderance of BUY calls, it is not difficult to find
names enjoying tremendous popularity on the street.
June 2017
40

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
We present below the snapshot of BSE 100 constituents that are top-most
Consensus BUY calls today.
Exhibit 42: Ten stocks with highest BUY ratings in BSE 100 – Quintile-1 of Consensus Buy
theme
Company
ITC
Aurobindo Pharma
Vedanta
HDFC Bank
Federal Bank
M&M
NTPC
Power Grid Corpn
ICICI Bank
Hindalco Inds.
Buy
38
35
20
48
31
40
33
36
42
26
Hold
1
2
0
2
1
2
1
1
3
4
Sell
2
1
2
4
3
4
4
5
5
1
% of Buy
ratings
93%
92%
91%
89%
89%
87%
87%
86%
84%
84%
Popularity
score
4.76
4.79
4.64
4.63
4.60
4.57
4.53
4.48
4.48
4.61
June 2017
41

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Summary: Performance of the quintiles
A review of the performance of the quintiles highlights that the central theme based
on popularity is the most effective way of creating quintiles. It meaningfully
separates the winners from the underperformers.
As evident, popularity is the best selection criterion amongst the three themes
(popularity, consensus sell and consensus buy) for creation of quintiles. It separates
the index members amongst the quintiles efficiently, which can be seen in
significant return differential across quintiles. If the selection criterion is efficient,
quintiles will show variation in returns otherwise the quintile returns will show little
difference.
The consensus sell theme comes second, owing to scarcity value of sell ratings,
whereas the consensus buy theme comes last.
The results seem fit, as popularity is an aggregate measure of sell, buy and hold
recommendations and should convey more information than sell/buy
recommendations in isolation.
Exhibit 43: Average returns (CAGR; 2006-16) across quintiles by strategy
Strategy
Popularity
Consensus Sell
Consensus Buy
Quintile 1
14.6
7.1
11.7
Quintile 2
13.7
12.3
11.8
Quintile 3
5.6
9.4
10.5
Quintile 4
16.0
10.7
14.6
Quintile 5
6.9
14.8
7.1
Source: Bloomberg
What’s particularly interesting is that in the long term, if we decide to select an
entire basket of stocks (quintile) based on any strategy, even the worst performing
quintile would beat the returns from a savings bank account.
June 2017
42

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Annexure: Focus stocks – Quintile-4 (popularity theme winners)
Consensus BUY (%)
Consensus SELL (%)
Consensus HOLD (%)
Net Buy (%)
Exhibit 44: Axis Bank
Net buy(%)
100
75
50
25
0
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Exhibit 45: Bajaj Auto
Net buy(%)
100
75
50
25
0
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 46: Colgate
Net buy(%)
140
100
60
20
-20
-60
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Exhibit 47: Dabur
100
75
50
25
0
Net buy(%)
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 48: Godrej Consumer
Net buy(%)
100
80
60
40
20
0
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Exhibit 49: Hero Motors
Net buy(%)
80
50
20
-10
-40
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
43

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Contrarian strategies based on valuation multiples
While the first section of this note dealt with contrarian strategies based on analyst
recommendations, this part deals with the contrarian strategies based on valuation
multiples.
In his classical book,
Contrarian Investment Strategies: The Psychological Edge,
David Dreman
suggested, “Favored stocks underperform the market while out-of
favor companies outperform the market, but the reappraisal often happens slowly,
even glacially”. Empirical evidence from the US markets suggests that the companies
the market expects the best future for – as measured by
price-to earnings, price-to
cash-flow, price-to-book-value –
have consistently done the worst, while the stocks
believed to have the most dismal future have done the best. We will see whether
this holds true in an emerging market like India.
June 2017
44

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Theme 1: Based on price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio
1
For every quarter starting with the quarter ended December 2006, we’ve divided
the BSE-100 constituents into quintiles based on P/E ratio and evaluated the returns
delivered by each quintile. Quintile-1 is composed of the highest P/E stocks, while
Quintile-5 has the lowest P/E stocks.
Conclusion:
We found that low P/E stocks outperformed the high P/E stocks by a
huge margin. The margin of outperformance increased with trailing P/E as the
criterion for forming the quintiles instead of 12-month forward P/E.
P/E
Exhibit 50: Low P/E stocks outperformed, whereas high P/E stocks failed to beat the market
600
450
300
150
0
High PE(CAGR-7.5%)
Q3(CAGR-13.4%)
Low PE(CAGR-16.6%)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100
Q2(CAGR-10.5%)
Q4(CAGR-6.3%)
BSE100(CAGR-10.2%)
483.8
364.2
269.6
277.4
210.8
187.4
Source: Bloomberg
Theme 2: Based on price-to-book-value (P/B) ratio
2
For every quarter starting with the quarter ended December 2006, we’ve divided
the BSE-100 constituents into quintiles based on P/B ratio and evaluated the returns
delivered by each quintile. Quintile-1 is composed of the highest P/B stocks, while
Quintile-5 has the lowest P/B stocks.
Conclusion:
Over the decade, low P/B stocks have underperformed the high P/B
stocks on forward multiples and outperformed high P/B stocks on trailing basis. The
alpha generated by low P/B stocks was much lower than other stocks. However, low
P/B stocks led all the other quintiles on the returns chart for the majority of the
decade.
P/B
Exhibit 51: Returns from BSE-100 and all quintiles barring Quintile-4 are quite close
450
350
250
150
50
Absolute Total returns(Average
)
High PB(CAGR-13.8%)
Q3(CAGR-10.8%)
Low PB(CAGR-12.5%)
Q2(CAGR-12.4%)
Q4(CAGR-6.9%)
BSE 100(CAGR-10.2%)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100
376.8
330.6
333.2
287.3
269.6
198.6
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
June 2017
45

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Low P/E stocks outperform high P/E stocks
1
Benjamin Graham’s “Intelligent Investor”
cites a study involving the constituents of
Dow Jones Industrial Average.
The performance of the 10 lowest P/E stocks, 10
highest P/E stocks, and of all the 30 stocks in the index was measured over set
periods between 1937 and 1969. In each time span, the low P/E did better than the
market and the high P/E stocks did worse.
In their legendary paper,
“Cross-section of Expected Stock Returns”,
Journal of
Finance, 1992,
Eugene Fama and Kenneth French
reported results similar to
Benjamin Graham’s findings. Several studies before and after the Fama-French study
also point towards the outperformance of out-of-favor stocks.
The findings of our study are similar. For every quarter starting with the quarter
ended December 2006, we divided the BSE-100 constituents into quintiles based on
one-year forward P/E ratio and evaluated the returns delivered by each quintile.
Quintile-1 has the highest P/E stocks, while Quintile-5 has the lowest P/E stocks.
Here’s what we found:
INR1k invested in the low P/E quintile in December 2006 would be worth
INR4.84k today.
INR1k invested in the high P/E quintile in December 2006 would be worth
INR1.87k today.
INR1k invested in the BSE-100 in December 2006 would be worth INR2.77k
today.
With remarkable consistency, investors misjudged subsequent performance. The
results are completely uniform. The most favored stocks by the market with highest
PE ratio continuously shows dismal returns, whereas the least favored stocks with
lowest PE ratio were rewarded by the market.
Exhibit 52: Low P/E stocks outperform market, whereas high P/E stocks fail to beat the market
600
450
300
150
0
High PE(CAGR-7.5%)
Q3(CAGR-13.4%)
Low PE(CAGR-16.6%)
Q2(CAGR-10.5%)
Q4(CAGR-6.3%)
BSE100(CAGR-10.2%)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100
483.8
364.2
269.6
277.4
210.8
187.4
P/E
Source: Bloomberg
Investors/analysts have consistently overvalued the favorite stocks and undervalued
the out-of-favor stocks! This has worked the same way across a long time period
(Benjamin Graham’s study focused on the period, 1937-1969, Fama-French’s study
June 2017
46

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
focused on the period, 1962-1989, and our study covers 2006-2016) and across
geographies (the first two studies focused on the US and we focused on India).
Exhibit 53: The results are better with trailing P/E ratio
650
500
350
200
50
Absolute Total returns(Average
)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100
High PE(CAGR-4.2%)
Q3(CAGR-10.9%)
Low PE(18.5%)
Q2(CAGR-9.9%)
Q4(CAGR-6.8%)
BSE100(CAGR-10.2%)
571.1
288.5
269.6
263.7
195.3
152.3
Source: Bloomberg
We repeated the same exercise with trailing P/E ratios. The results were even
better, bringing to the fore two interesting observations:
1. Trailing valuation multiple better predictor:
Low P/E stocks based on trailing
earnings returned 18.5%, generating an alpha of 8.3% over the BSE-100
benchmark on annual basis, almost 1.7% more than low P/E stocks based on
forward estimates. Returns from high P/E stocks, which failed to even beat the
benchmark, were dismal on both trailing and forward earnings.
2.
The market is slow in re-appraisal of low P/E stocks.
Over the last 10 years, on
an average, almost 63% of the members across low P/E quintiles based on
trailing and forward earnings are common. On the other hand, just 20% of the
stocks are common across high P/E quintiles on trailing and forward earnings,
suggesting that re-appraisal happens much faster but erroneously.
Exhibit 54: Market is slow in re-appraisal of low P/E stocks, but quick for high P/E stocks
99
79
59
39
19
-1
Common Low PE Stocks
Common High PE Stocks
53.3
26.7
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
47

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Case study: 5
Indian Oil Corporation (IOC)
Exhibit 55: IOCL beats BSE-100 by a significant 59.1% over March-
December 2016
IOCL became a member of the low P/E quintile
in March 2016 and exited at the end of
December 2016, delivering a return of 67.6%
against the BSE-100’s 8.1% return during the
nine months.
IOCL is the largest refining company in India,
with ~43% market share in petrol and ~48%
market share in diesel. It has the largest
network of product pipelines, terminals and
depots, giving it a pan-India reach.
While HPCL and BPCL got re-rated in 2014
post deregulation, IOCL has gone through a
de-rating because of the concerns on the large
capex of INR350b (almost one-third of the
market cap at that time). Now that there is
more visibility on the Paradip project, with
85% utilization in March 2017, the stock has
started to re-rate. It still trades at 5.6x FY19E
EV/EBITDA (MOSL estimates) and 9.4x FY19E
EPS. Global peers trade at 10.8x one-year
,
forward EPS and 6.8x one-year forward
EV/EBITDA, with lower RoE of 13% (IOCL’s
RoE: ~20%).It has however exited from the
low P/E quintile.
The 15mmtpa Paradip refinery, with a Nelson
Complexity of 12.2 would have higher GRM
than IOCL’s vintage refineries and is expected
to contribute to the company’s profits. With
successful commissioning of the Paradip
refinery, IOCL would also have larger
availability of products in the South, which it
traditionally lacked.
180
160
140
120
100
80
Indexed Returns
IOCL
BSE 100
167.6
108.1
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 56: Trailing P/E of IOCL
25
20
15
10
5
IOCL PE(x)
10.2
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
48

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Case study: 6
Rural Electrification Corporation
Exhibit 57: RECL has stayed ahead of BSE-100 for the majority of the
timeframe
270
220
170
120
70
RECL is a member of the low P/E quintile
from June 2011 and has delivered 154%
returns, beating the BSE-100 by 73%. It has
been consistently valued at lower multiple
by the market and it has consistently
outperformed the market. There have been
instances across these 5-6 years when
returns from the BSE-100 were higher, but
for most of the time, RECL outperformed.
POWF is another stock with the same story;
it too has been outperforming the market.
RECL is the government’s nodal agency for
financing rural electrification programs. It
has strategic importance in funding power
infrastructure in India. It has good capital
adequacy, with healthy capitalization,
diversified resources, and stable
profitability.
RECL has delivered decent PAT CAGR of
17.1% over FY11-16, but the stock has
always been a member of the low P/E
quintile. Additionally, RECL offers good
dividend yield, which provides protection to
investor returns.
There have been concerns, too.
Implementation of the UDAY scheme would
result in loan book/NIM compression for
RECL. Loan book has stayed flat due to
prepayment under UDAY. However,
disbursements were up 26% YoY in FY17.
RECL trades at a huge discount to its peers.
Indexed Returns
RECL
BSE 100
254.0
181.7
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 58: Trailing P/E of RECLRs
20
15
10
5
0
RECL PE(x)
6.1
Source: MOSL,
June 2017
49

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 59: Low P/E stocks have generated significant alpha across all time horizons
200
150
100
50
0
High PE
Q2
Q3
Q4
Low PE
BSE100
Source: Bloomberg
Average Price appreciation of quintiles across different time horizons
1-year
2-year
3-year
5-year
7-year
The low P/E stocks offer higher dividend yield (2.8%) than the market (1.5%), which
acts as a support for stock performance in a downturn. On the other hand, stocks
with high P/E ratios offer lower dividend yield (0.68%) than the market. Worse, they
fail to deliver the growth they promise based on higher PE ratios!.
Exhibit 60: High dividend yield supports performance of low P/E stocks in bear phases
%
Perfomance of Quintiles
Total Return
Price Return
Dividend Return
18.5
15.7
9.9
8.9
10.9
9.1
2006-2017(curr.)
10.2
4.2
6.8
1.7
8.7
1.5
3.5
0.7
Q1
Q2
1.1
Q3
4.8
1.9
Q4
Q5
2.8
BSE 100
Source: Bloomberg
Low P/E quintile has the highest up-capture ratio (156), driven by low valuations and
it beats the other quintiles by a significant margin (next best is Quintile-3: 106).
However, what aids the performance of these stocks is that along with the
stupendous up-capture, they also have a satisfactory down-capture!
Exhibit 61: Low P/E stocks have fantastic up-capture, with a decent down-capture
Up capture
180
160
140
Down capture
60
80
120
100
Q2
80
60
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
100
Q3
Q4
120
Q1
140
Q5
Winner
Up Capture 156
Down Capture 119
June 2017
50

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
The high P/E stocks perform miserably, with the highest down-capture (124) during
a downturn and the lowest up-capture (91) during an upturn.
Exhibit 62: Up-capture and down-capture of quintiles
Q1
Upside capture ratio
Downside capture ratio
91
124
Q2
99
100
Q3
106
104
Q4
99
119
Q5
156
119
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
Exhibit 63: Fifteen stocks from our universe with lowest Trailing P/E
Company
Power Fin.Corpn.
Rural Elec.Corp.
HPCL
BPCL
IOCL
ONGC
NMDC
NTPC
Hindalco Inds.
Tech Mahindra
Reliance Inds.
JSW Steel
Tata Steel
HCL Technologies
Power Grid Corpn
CMP
(INR)
129
182
512
642
394
161
109
159
192
387
1433
197
515
849
202
MCap
(INR B)
340
359
521
842
1911
2060
346
1310
396
381
4643
477
500
1199
1055
Trailing PE (x)
5-yr Avg.
6.2
5.5
21.2
15.5
14.1
11.8
12.0
11.3
39.3
14.8
11.9
28.2
8.5
18.4
14.0
Current
5.0
5.8
8.4
8.9
9.6
9.8
11.0
12.2
11.8
12.5
13.4
13.3
13.9
14.2
14.2
PE
Prem/Disc (%)
-19.5
6.2
-60.5
-43.0
-31.8
-17.3
-8.4
8.3
-69.9
-15.1
12.8
-52.7
63.6
-22.9
0.8
PAT CAGR (%)
FY17-19
5.6
8.8
-9.2
-1.0
1.9
13.4
8.6
7.6
16.9
6.1
6.2
15.1
21.6
3.4
13.0
Popularity
RoE (%)
Score
FY17
3.5
17.9
3.4
19.9
3.4
32.4
3.7
32.4
4.0
22.3
4.4
10.4
2.8
12.4
4.7
11.5
4.4
14.0
3.9
18.4
4.1
11.9
3.8
17.3
3.8
15.4
4.1
27.5
4.7
16.2
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
Exhibit 64: Fifteen stocks from our universe with highest trailing P/E
CMP
Company
Ambuja Cem.
M & M Fin. Serv.
Marico
Havells India
Colgate-Palm.
Godrej Consumer
Bosch
Asian Paints
Hind. Unilever
Nestle India
Titan Company
BHEL
Siemens
ABB
United Breweries
(INR)
244
341
314
474
1101
960
24277
1164
1094
6773
520
137
1353
1486
781
MCap
(INR B)
485
193
404
296
299
654
762
1116
2367
653
462
335
482
315
207
Trailing PE (x)
5-yr Avg.
29.3
18.0
41.7
28.6
41.7
40.4
47.7
49.6
40.1
92.2
40.6
20.6
90.9
99.1
102.9
Current
50.0
48.1
49.9
49.6
51.9
50.8
51.3
55.4
55.7
57.4
57.6
67.6
75.9
75.4
89.9
PE
PAT CAGR (%) POPULARITY
ROE (%)
Prem/Disc (%) FY17-FY19
70.8
13.8
167.4
32.3
19.6
10.2
73.1
14.8
24.5
13.5
25.7
9.7
7.6
17.9
11.7
9.3
39.0
11.2
-37.7
5.8
41.8
10.4
228.4
34.7
-16.5
23.2
-23.8
17.7
-12.7
19.2
SCORE
FY17
3.0
5.0
3.4
6.4
2.9
36.7
3.0
18.2
3.3
50.4
3.2
24.6
3.5
15.8
3.2
28.5
3.9
65.6
2.5
39.0
3.5
20.6
2.2
1.5
2.6
9.3
2.1
12.7
2.8
10.4
Source: MOSL, Bloomberg
June 2017
51

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Analyzing stocks based on premium/discount w.r.t history
After establishing the premise that low PE stocks outperform high PE stocks, we
went a step forward of analyzing stocks based on their PE discount/premium
w.r.t history. This is because we understand that there are certain sectors like
consumer stocks that have outperformed index even when they have traded on
higher valuations since 2008 or certain sectors always trade at lower multiples
like OMC’s, so looking at stock’s valuation discount/premium w.r.t history can
also be quite meaningful indicator.
For every quarter starting with the quarter ended December 2010, we divided
the BSE-100 constituents into quintiles based on discounts/premiums to their
trailing ratios and evaluated the returns delivered by each quintile. Quintile-1
has the highest P/E stocks, while Quintile-5 has the lowest P/E stocks.
Exhibit 65: Low P/E stocks outperform market, whereas high P/E stocks fail to beat market
250
200
150
100
50
Absolute Total returns(Average
)
High PE(CAGR-4.2%)
Q3(CAGR-10.9%)
Low PE(18.5%)
Q2(CAGR-9.9%)
Q4(CAGR-6.8%)
BSE100(CAGR-10.2%)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100
218.4
177.7
170.2
168.0
153.5
126.8
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
52

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Annexure: Focus stocks - Low P/E quintile
Exhibit 66: Wipro trailing PE
22
19
16
13
10
WIpro PE (x)
Exhibit 67: Coal India trailing PE
25
20
Coal India PE (x)
15.3
17.8
15
10
5
Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 68: Divi’s Laboratories trailing PE
38
30
22
14
6
DIVI PE (x)
Exhibit 69: Tata motor trailing PE
32
24
16
Tata motors PE (x)
21.7
14.6
8
0
Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 70: Tech Mahindra trailing PE
25
20
15
10
5
Tech Mahindra PE (x)
Exhibit 71: RECL trailing PE
20
15
10
RECL PE(x)
6.1
12.0
5
0
Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg
June 2017
53

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Low P/B stocks dominate, but overall results mixed
2
For every quarter starting with the quarter ended December 2006, we divided the
BSE-100 constituents into quintiles based on P/B ratio and evaluated the returns
delivered by each quintile. Quintile-1 is composed of the highest P/B stocks, while
Quintile-5 has the lowest P/B stocks.
The most favored stocks, with the highest P/B ratios (Quintile-1) delivered highest
returns (CAGR of 13.8%), followed by the low P/B quintile (CAGR of 12.5%) followed
by Quintile-2 (CAGR of 12.4%) and Quintile-3 (CAGR of 10.8%). Among all the
quintiles, only Quintile-4 failed to beat the benchmark.
The winner quintile (high P/B) did not generate as much alpha as the winner quintile
of the previous theme (low P/E stocks). So, over the last 10 years, forward P/B ratio
has not been as effective as P/E ratio in segregating the winners from losers.
In
Cross-section of Expected Stock Returns,
Journal of Finance, 1992,
Eugene Fama
and
Kenneth French
highlighted the success of low P/B stocks over high P/B stocks.
In India, this has not worked as well as themes based on P/E ratios. However, low
P/B stocks have dominated other quintiles for most of the decade under
consideration.
Exhibit 72: Returns of BSE-100 and all quintiles barring Quintile-4 are quite close
450
350
250
150
50
Absolute Total returns (Average
)
High PB(CAGR-13.8%)
Q3(CAGR-10.8%)
Low PB(CAGR-12.5%)
Q2(CAGR-12.4%)
Q4(CAGR-6.9%)
BSE 100(CAGR-10.2%)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100
376.8
330.6
333.2
287.3
269.6
198.6
P/B
Source: Bloomberg
We have repeated the same analysis with trailing P/B ratio. The low P/B stocks
based on trailing BV did better than low P/B stocks based on forward BV, whereas
the high P/B stocks did somewhat worse. Again, low P/B stocks led the other groups
for the majority of the decade and are the winners.
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Exhibit 73: Trailing P/B ratio also presents the same picture
450
350
250
150
50
Absolute Total returns(Average
)
High PB(CAGR-11.7%)
Q3(CAGR-7.8%)
Low PB(CAGR-13.7%)
Performance of different quintiles of BSE100
Q2(CAGR-12.8%)
Q4(CAGR-8.8%)
BSE 100(CAGR-10.2%)
371.4
342.3
311.7
269.6
215.8
238.2
Source: Bloomberg
However, the results are again much less appealing as compared to the P/E theme.
In our previous theme, we have done our analysis on BSE-100 excluding banks, as
the price-earnings ratio is less relevant for banks. Also, private banks in general have
been one of the biggest wealth creators, even at relatively high valuations. We want
to be sure that the above result has not been affected by this exclusion of banks.
So, we repeated the same analysis on BSE-100 excluding banks. The results were
similar, with low P/B stocks dominating, but high P/B stocks have also delivered
significant returns. Similar results were achieved with forward P/B ratios.
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Summary: Performance of contrarian themes
A review of the performance of contrarian themes based on relative valuation
metrics suggests that the P/E ratio is a better predictor of returns as compared to
P/B ratio.
Exhibit 74: Price to Earnings> Price to Book in stock selection
625
500
375
250
125
0
Indexed Returns
Low PE
Low PB
Perfromance of different themes
BSE 100
571.1
324.8
269.6
Source: Bloomberg
It separates the index members among the quintiles efficiently, which can be seen in
the significant return differential across quintiles.
If the selection criterion is efficient, the quintiles show variation in returns.
Otherwise, there is little difference in the quintile returns, which seems to be the
case with P/B. Hence, the P/B theme ranks the last in our themes.
Exhibit 75: Returns (CAGR 2006-17(current)) by quintile under each strategy
Strategy
Trailing PE
Trailing PB
Quintile 1
4.19
11.73
Quintile 2
9.92
12.76
Quintile 3
10.89
7.79
Quintile 4
6.75
8.83
Quintile 5
18.53
13.66
Source: Bloomberg
What’s particularly interesting is that in the long term, if we decide to select an
entire basket of stocks (quintile) based on any strategy, even the worst-performing
quintile would beat the savings account rate.
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Analysis
of
sectors on our
framework
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Metals: A contra bet of CY16
Metals & mining was one of the best performing sectors in FY17, delivering
returns (Nifty Metals index) of 61.9% and an alpha over the benchmark Nifty of
18.5%.
The strong performance was primarily driven by a recovery in earnings (off the
bottom) and aided by re-rating of multiples. Earnings for our metals pack (in
EBITDA terms) grew 68% YoY in FY17, driven by higher prices across
commodities and an increase in volumes.
The sector is a living demonstration of the Contrarian Buy hypothesis
highlighted in this report. The sector traded at a discount and its popularity hit
the bottom in early-2016 when metal prices were at historical lows.
Valuations profile
Metals are trading at 6.7x EV/EBITDA, almost at a 10% discount to their long-term
averages. Metals are generally counter-cyclical – they trade at a premium at the
bottom of the earnings cycle and at some discount when the cycle is at its peak.
This, however, was not the case in early-2016, when commodity prices were at
their historical lows and the sector was available at a discount to its long-term
average.
The de-rating was due to concerns about sustainable demand growth for
commodities in China and deflation, in our view.
Exhibit 76: Metals trade at 7% discount to historical average on EV/EBITDA basis
Metals Sector EV/EBDITA (x)
13.5
10.5
7.5
4.5
1.5
4.1
7.3
6.8
LPA (x)
11.2
Source: Bloomberg
The outlook has since improved, as commodity prices have recovered from their
lows, demand is growing at a steady pace in China and also led by a few supply-side
initiatives. This is evident from the consensus rating profile of the sector.
The sector is now available at close to its long-term average multiple. In our view,
the future performance will continue to be driven primarily by growth in earnings –
partly on higher prices and also on improving utilization. A re-rating will be a factor
of stern actions to curb overcapacity in China and developments around
infrastructure investments in the US.
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Sector consensus rating profile
Exhibit 84-85 shows how the popularity of the metals sector has improved gradually
after bottoming out in December 2015/January 2016, while Exhibit 145 shows the
change in the net buy position.
Exhibit 77: Metals – popularity
100
80
60
40
20
0
Metals
Net buy(%)
Buy(%)
Sell(%)
Hold(%)
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 78: Metals – popularity with analysts has increased, currently close to LTA
Popularity rel. to history
4.0
3.8
3.6
3.4
3.2
3.0
Metals popularity
Popularity
Average
0.5
0.3
0.0
-0.3
-0.5
Source: Bloomberg
As apparent, metals’ popularity was at bottom in Dec 15-Mar 16, and it was a
contrarian call (in hindsight), which would have worked out very well.
Our top picks
Hindalco
is our top pick in the sector, as (a) its India business has the competitive
advantage of low-cost raw materials and a growing demand market, (b) Novelis is
generating healthy cash and has attractive growth opportunities with the rising
adoption of aluminum in automobiles (Novelis, being a first mover and with strong
customer relations, has an edge) and (c) capex cycle is behind, and with strong FCF
generation, the focus is on deleveraging. We value the stock on 6.5x FY18E
EV/EBITDA, at INR242/share.
June 2017
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Pharma: Ripe for a contrarian bet
FY17 was a tough year for the pharmaceuticals and healthcare sector, delivering
returns of -5.26% (Nifty Pharma & Healthcare index), as against the benchmark
Nifty’s 18.5% returns. The underperformance has continued in FY18. The Indian
pharma industry finds itself engulfed in challenges posed by:
Pricing pressure in the US generics market
2.
Investment in R&D in generic and specialty businesses at all-time high – returns
to be visible in 2-3 years
3.
Issues pertaining to US FDA inspection and resolution
4.
Promotion of generic drugs in India – implementation will not be easy
1.
We analyzed the sector through our Contrarian Investing framework, looking at
analyst ratings, valuation profile, etc.
Sector consensus rating profile
Pharma sector popularity with consensus is at its lowest level in several years
Exhibit 79: Pharma sector popularity – Buy ratings lowest since 2010
80
60
40
20
0
Pharmaceuticals
Net buy(%)
Sell(%)
Buy(%)
Hold(%)
Source: Bloomberg
Exhibit 80: Pharma sector popularity with analysts is below long-term average
5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
1.0
Popularity rel. to history(rhs)
Popularity
Average
Pharmaceutical popularity
0.4
0.2
0.0
-0.2
-0.4
Source: Bloomberg
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Valuations profile
These factors weighed on valuations, which have corrected significantly over the
past two years. The sector trades at 20.2x, at a 10% discount to its long-term
average.
Exhibit 81: Pharma sector trading at 10% discount to LPA (on P/E basis)
42
34
26
18
10
13.0
22.3
20.2
Healthcare Sector PE (x)
LPA (x)
34.8
Source: Bloomberg
Earnings growth took a hit in FY17, coming in below long-term average growth. We
expect earnings growth to remain subdued in FY18 as well.
Exhibit 82: Earnings growth likely to remain subdued…
Pharma sector EPS Growth (%)
42.2
28.2
30.0
15.7
19.3
4.0
14.1
10.5
8.0
Source: Bloomberg
However, several pharma companies now appear cheap on PEG basis (FY19).
Exhibit 83: …however several pharma companies appear cheap on PEG basis
1.6
0.9
1.2
0.9
1.1
0.8
0.8
PEG
0.9
0.4
0.5
1.2
0.4
1.2
2.0
1.5
1.4
0.9
Source: Bloomberg
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Thematic | Contrarian Investing
In our view, the Indian pharma sector fits well with the tenets of Contrarian
Investment. Performance of the sector over the past two years has been subdued
and news flow remains adverse. Amid this tumultuous phase, valuations have come
off and the sector now trades at a discount to the long-period average. Popularity of
the sector is also at its lowest in many years. The sector has seen a series of earnings
cuts in the last 18 months and its weightage in the key indices has shrunk given the
underperformance. Even from an institutional ownership perspective, the
healthcare sector weight in the Indian Mutual Funds portfolio has reached a new
low of 6.1% (-50bp MoM). As a result, the sector has fallen to the ninth position in
sector allocation of mutual funds – it was at the fifth position 12 months ago.
Fundamentally, while we do not expect the sector’s fortunes to change overnight,
we believe it no longer suffers from an adverse combination of ‘high expectations
and premium valuations’. Valuations now offer an attractive entry opportunity from
a medium- to long-term perspective, in our view, even as expectations have
moderated.
Our top picks:
Sun Pharma, Aurobindo Pharma, Fortis Healthcare
June 2017
62

Thematic | Contrarian Investing
Information Technology: A contrarian bet? Not yet !!
The Indian IT industry finds itself caught up in the vortex of multiple challenges to
growth (which is moderating) due to a confluence of factors:
1. Value migration away from legacy business models to digital
2. Client uncertainty amid policy headwinds from its largest offshore market
3. Pricing pressure in traditional services from the combination of commoditized
offerings and rising acceptance of automation
After a decade and a half of strong growth (24% CAGR over FY05-15), there has been
a sharp moderation (6% CAGR over FY15-17). Given this context, we look at the
important contrarian indicators for the IT sector – popularity and valuation profiles.
Sector consensus rating profile
Scanning through the consensus rating data, we found the number of ‘Buy’ ratings
lower and ‘Sell’ ratings higher than the historical trends.
Exhibit 84: Technology sector popularity
100
75
50
25
0
Technology
Net buy(%)
Sell(%)
Buy(%)
Hold(%)
Put differently, the popularity of the Indian IT sector is at its lowest level in recent
times.
Exhibit 85: Technology sector popularity with analysts is low relative to history
4.30
4.10
3.90
3.70
3.50
Tech popularity