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For India Inc, acche din is honestly NOT here!

February 04, 2019 18:28 IST

India Inc’s profit share in the country’s GDP at 15-year low in 2018. Since 2013, net profit for top 500 companies has remained in the range between Rs 4 trillion and Rs 4.8 trillion despite steady growth in nominal GDP.

Illustration: Uttam Ghosh/Rediff.com

India Inc’s profit share in the country’s GDP has hit a 15-year low.

The corporate profit-to-GDP ratio for 2018 stood at just 2.8 per cent, the lowest since 2003.

The share is down to a third compared to the peak of 7.8 per cent a decade ago and is also below the 20-year average of 4.4 per cent, an analysis by domestic brokerage Motilal Oswal Securities shows.

 

“The continued soft patch in earnings over the last decade has resulted in steady deterioration in the corporate profit-to-GDP ratio,” it says.

Since 2013, net profit for top 500 companies has remained in the range between Rs 4 trillion and Rs 4.8 trillion despite steady growth in nominal GDP.

“Over 2013-2018, profit CAGR of 3.8 per cent has significantly lagged GDP CAGR of 11 per cent,” says Motilal Oswal.

CAGR is compounded annual growth rate.  Barring 2017, the share of profits in GDP has been consistently falling.

Rebound in profits in global cyclicals such as metals and oil and gas companies coupled with fall in losses at state-owned banks had led to an uptick in the corporate profit-to-GDP ratio in 2017, says the brokerage.

Analysts at Motilal Oswal Securities, led by Gautam Duggad, believe similar to 2013, the corporate profit-to-GDP ratio could have hit a trough.

“We now believe that India’s earnings growth has bottomed out and that the corporate profit to GDP ratio should expand hereon.

"Our confidence stems from the bottoming out of the asset quality cycle in state-owned and private corporate banks and some initial signs of green-shoots in private corporate capex. Consumption, too, remains robust,” they say.

Jash Kriplani
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