In one of my previous
post,
I argued for the need to distinguish between good sectors and bad sectors in
portfolio investment. However, in the Indian capital market context, the
availability and popularity of sector indices/ETF’s is still developing making
it difficult to implement a sector based portfolio strategy. As an extension of
that research, it may be worthwhile to see the link between sectors and
companies. In simple terms, you may have a bad company in a good sector or a
good company in a bad sector. How do you reconcile such conflicts?
Why
Sectors matter?
Source: Reuters Eikon
BSE has 19 sector indices.
If one tracks their annualized performance for the period January 2008 to September
2015, we can see that there is wide variation in their performance. While
healthcare was the best performer (20.1% compounded return), Realty sector was
the worst performer (-24.6% compounded return) with Sensex performing at 3.8%
annualized. Out of the 19 sectors, 8 outperformed Sensex while others
underperformed Sensex. Hence, sector performance matters.
Source: Reuters Eikon
While the annualized
performance shows huge variation, even within a sector we see wide variation in
performance as captured in the graph that depicts median performance. The best
example is that of Healthcare, where the best performer clocked an annualized
performance of 43.1% while the worst performer clocked an annualized
performance of -29.1% with a median performance of 21.4%. Hence, it may not be
enough to just bet on good sectors as even within good sectors we notice wide
variation in performance.
The 4 Grid approach
Here is the dilemma while
choosing companies. We may have good companies in bad sectors (like Castrol in
Oil and Gas) or bad companies in good sectors (Financial Technologies). Hence,
it may be worthwhile to regroup the index constituents across these four
dimensions and assess their portfolio performance (based on market cap
weights):
1.
Good companies, good
sectors (A)
2.
Good companies, bad
sectors (B)
3.
Bad companies, good
sectors (C)
4.
Bad companies, bad
sectors (D)
The definition of a good company/sector
is that it outperforms the Sensex returns and conversely a bad company/sector
is the one that underperforms the Sensex.
Here are the findings:
Grid A (Good companies, Good Sectors)
Grid A companies (67 of
them) have outperformed both their sector and the wider Sensex with the highest
performer clocking an annualized performance of 85% (Indiabulls Housing Finance)
while the lowest performer clocking an annualized performance of 3.8% (Mphasis)
still better than Sensex. All the more, when you group them as a portfolio
(market cap weighted) the portfolio performance is an impressive 17.5% annualized
compared to Sensex performance of 3.8%.
Grid
A-Top10
Sl.
No.
|
Name
of the company
|
Annualized
Return (2008-2015)
|
1
|
Indiabulls Housing
Finance
|
85.1%
|
2
|
TTK Prestige
|
46.5%
|
3
|
Lupin
|
43.1%
|
4
|
Jubliant Food Works
|
42.7%
|
5
|
Aurobindo Pharma
|
40.8%
|
6
|
Vakrangee
|
37.7%
|
7
|
PC Jeweller
|
37.6%
|
8
|
Strides Acrolab
|
37.0%
|
9
|
Whirlpool
|
35.7%
|
10
|
Cadila Healthcare
|
35.6%
|
Grid B (Good companies, Bad Sectors)
Grid B companies are drawn
from sectors that has underperformed the Sensex but whose constituent companies
have outperformed the wider Sensex and contains 24 companies with the highest
performer clocking an annualized performance of 63% (Eicher Motors) while the
lowest performer clocking an annualized performance of 4.4% (Siemens) still
better than Sensex. All the more, when you group them as a portfolio (market
cap weighted) the portfolio performance is 14.9% annualized compared to Sensex
performance of 3.8%
Grid B –Top 10
|
|||
Sl.
No.
|
Name
of the company
|
Annualized Return (2008-2015)
|
|
1
|
Eicher Motors
|
62.8%
|
|
2
|
Shree Cements
|
32.3%
|
|
3
|
Asian Paints
|
30.0%
|
|
4
|
Pidilite Industries
|
25.5%
|
|
5
|
FAG Bearings
|
25.4%
|
|
6
|
Castrol
|
23.1%
|
|
7
|
Havells Inda
|
18.0%
|
|
8
|
BPCL
|
16.4%
|
|
9
|
AIA Engineering
|
14.9%
|
|
10
|
Indraprastha Gas
|
14.0%
|
Grid-C (Bad Companies, Good
Sectors)
Grid C companies are drawn
from sectors that has outperformed the Sensex but whose constituent companies
have underperformed Sensex and contains 19 companies with the highest performer
clocking an annualized performance of 1.2% (ICICI Bank) while the lowest
performer clocking an annualized performance of -33.4% (Financial Technologies)
far worse than Sensex. All the more, when you group them as a portfolio (market
cap weighted) the portfolio performance is -5.0% annualized compared to Sensex
performance of 3.8%
Grid
C-top 10
Sl.
No.
|
Name
of the company
|
Annualized Return (2008-2015)
|
1
|
ICICI Bank
|
1.2%
|
2
|
SBI
|
0.8%
|
3
|
Dish TV
|
0.4%
|
4
|
Punjab National Bank
|
0.1%
|
5
|
Sun TV
|
-1.5%
|
6
|
Jagran Prakashan
|
-1.5%
|
7
|
Union Bank of India
|
-2.1%
|
8
|
Canara Bank
|
-2.2%
|
9
|
DEN Networks
|
-4.6%
|
10
|
Blue star
|
-4.7%
|
Grid-D (Bad Companies, Bad Sectors)
Grid D companies are drawn
from sectors that has underperformed the Sensex and whose constituent companies
have also underperformed Sensex and contains 65 companies with the highest
performer clocking an annualized performance of 3.6% (ACC) while the lowest
performer clocking an annualized performance of -43.1% (Unitech) far worse than
Sensex. All the more, when you group them as a portfolio (market cap weighted)
the portfolio performance is -7.9% annualized compared to Sensex performance of
3.8%
Grid D-Top 10
Sl.
No.
|
Name
of the company
|
Annualized Return (2008-2015)
|
1
|
ACC Ltd
|
3.6%
|
2
|
Gujarat State Petronet
|
2.6%
|
3
|
Adani Port and SEZ
|
2.2%
|
4
|
Pipav Defence
|
1.8%
|
5
|
Alstom
|
1.6%
|
6
|
IDEA Cellular
|
1.0%
|
7
|
Aditya Birla Nuvo
|
0.8%
|
8
|
Lakshmi Machine Works
|
0.7%
|
9
|
Grasim Industries
|
0.7%
|
10
|
Larsen & Tourbo
|
0.7%
|
Key Takeaways
1.
A strong look at the
sector to which a company belongs is key to identifying winners
2. There may be good
companies in bad sectors and vice-versa. Hence, a sector bias should not cloud
out opportunities.
3.
In general, good
companies come from good sectors. That is a killer combination to have in your
portfolio (Remember Grid A)
4.
In general, bad
companies come from bad sectors. This should be avoided at all costs. (Remember
Grid D)
The author thanks Rajesh Dheenadayalan for data analytics and support
The author thanks Rajesh Dheenadayalan for data analytics and support