August 9, 2010

Stock analysis : FDC ltd

About
FDC is an Indian Pharmaceuticals company with an operating history of more than 50 years. The company is into formulations, synthetics, nutraceuticals and bio-tech with a focus on therapeutic groups of ORS, opthalmologicals, dermatologicals, Anti-biotics, Cardio and diabetes. The company has several well known brands such as electral, enerzal etc.

Financials
The company has maintained an ROE in excess of 20% for the last 10 years. In addition the company is conservatively financed with zero debt and excess cash position during the same period.

The company has maintained fixed asset turns (sales/ fixed asset) at the same levels by investing in fixed assets in line with the topline growth. The working capital turns (sales/ working capital) have improved from around 5 to 9+ levels in the last 10 years. This improvement has been driven mainly by an improvement in receivable turns (sales/ account receivables).

The net margins have improved from the 15% levels to 20% levels mainly due to drop in raw material prices.

Positives
The company has maintained a high ROE with a very conservative balance sheet. The company has maintained excess cash and financed growth with the free cash flow generated from operations.

The company has also been able to maintain a topline and bottom-line growth in excess of 15% in spite of high competition and change in the operating environment (changes in patent laws in 2005).The company announced a buy-back in 2008 and has been able to use the excess cash to reduce the number of outstanding shares.

The company has a consistent track record of introducing several new products every year and currently spends almost 3% of sales on R&D which is a crucial investment in the pharma business.
The company is conservative in other aspects of the business such as foreign acquisitions (none) or expanding in the foreign markets (exports are 10% of total turnover).

Risks
The company operates in a business characterized by a high level of competition from domestic and deep pocketed global pharma companies. Although company spends a substantial amount on R&D, global players such as JNJ spend in excess of 10% on R&D. As a result the R&D spend of the company is small by most standards and can be utilized only to develop the off patent molecules in the form of generics for the local and export market.

This is a very competitive business with low to moderate profitability and several other domestic pharma companies such as a CIPLA or Dr reddy’s have a major head start in the space (they are almost 10 times the size of FDC)

In addition the company is also into the consumer health space which is closer to FMCG than pharma products and requires a different set of skills and focus.

Competitive analysis
The industry is characterized by a large number of domestic and foreign competitors. India, China and other BRIC countries are the major growth areas now and all the major companies are now targeting India for growth. The market is already experiencing a high level of competition and activity. One indicator is the number of new product launches and corresponding marketing and sales cost.

The generics opportunity in the export markets of US, Europe and Japan is big with thin margins and high levels of competition.

In case of a drug coming off patent, the pricing typically drops off by more than 60% in the first year and by almost 80% by the third year of patent expiration. As a result these are high risk – high return, limited duration type of opportunities.

Management quality checklist

- Management compensation – Management compensation seems reasonable at less than 3% of net profit.
- Capital allocation record – Fairly good till date. The management has kept the ROE high, inspite of high cash levels. In addition the management has also used the excess capital to buy-back shares which is a sensible decision.
- Shareholder communication – Very sketchy. The mandatory disclosure in terms of the balance sheet, P&L and other schedules are as per the standards. However the company, like other mid cap companies, is very sketchy and does not provide enough discussion on the subjective parts of the business. It gives a very generic overview of the business and has not discussed the plans for the future in detail. If you compare with the annual reports of other pharma companies like Dr reddy’s, the differences are glaring. I can live without too much detail for a steel or a cement company as the numbers give a good picture, but for a pharma or IT company the subjective details are important to evaluate the future of the company. This is a big negative for me.
- Accounting practice – Seems ok. Nothing out of the ordinary
- Conflict of interest – Related party transactions seem fine. I could not find anything out of the ordinary.

Competitor analysis (top 2-3 competitors)
The main competitors for FDC are the domestic pharma companies such as Dr reddy’s, Cipla, Sun pharma and Ranbaxy. These companies are much larger than FDC and are not strictly comparable. At the same time, competition in the pharma industry is by segment. The term pharma is too broad for comparison. If one has to compare competitors, it would be by therapeutic groups such as anti-bioitics, cardio-vasculars, opthalmologicals etc.

FDC has a leading position in some segments such ORS and a few leading brands such as ZIPANT-D SR, 1-AL etc.

The net margins for FDC are comparable to the other top companies and the ROE is also in the same range of 20%+. The overall business risk to FDC is much lesser as the company has not expanded aggressively in the foreign markets. Conversely the returns and growth have been lower too compared to the other aggressive competitors such as Dr reddys, SUN pharma etc.

Valuation
A DCF calculation with a net margins of around 16-18% and 10-12% growth (both assumptions are conservative based on past history), gives a fair value of 120-140 per share. The company would be a good value below a price of 70 per share or if the company started doing far better than the assumptions in the above valuation.

Conclusion
FDC has been a conservatively managed company which has done fairly well in the past 10 years. The company has expanded mainly in the domestic markets and is now expanding slowly into exports via new ANDA filings. The company is likely to maintain a 10-15% growth in line with the market growth with some additional growth coming from exports.

As an investor, I would expect the company to give me moderate returns at low risk. I don’t think the company can be a multi-bagger in the short to medium term.

Disclosure : I have position in the stock. The above analysis is not to recommend the stock. So please do your own homework on it.

9 comments:

investologic said...

Hi Rohit
Nice analysis, I have a position in this stock as well !!!!

Anonymous said...

dear rohit
thanx for a good analysis. although u say u have position in the stock it does not reflect in your MY PORTFOLIO tab. does that reflct a long term hold and thesepicks arestill in testing waters

ramurthy said...

sir,
this is very basic question.generally in any quarterly results "increase or decrease in stock" value is given.
sometimes consumption of raw materials is higher when compared to previous qtr but this inc or dec in stock is shown -ve value.which means what.

Inquisitive Stranger said...

Hi Rohit,

Can you provide us the BV of the Stock?

Thanks
Vik

Ankit Sanghvi said...

Hi Rohit,

I am a big fan of your blogs. Really lucid and well - researched.

Regarding FDC, as rightly pointed about by competition is what concerns me the most. The stock does provide some upside, nonetheless, the recent fall coupled with the fact that the stock has broken its 50 DMA, would demand a wait n watch strategy. I would wait till it hits its 200 DMA at Rs 75.

I am aware that technical analysis is not the focus of your blogs, neither am I a big fan of that approach, but I still do not find deep value or exciting growth in the stock.

Cheers
A

Rohit Chauhan said...

Hi anon
i have not update the portfolio page. FDC is now a holding for me..though a smaller one

rgds
rohit

Rohit Chauhan said...

Hi ramurthy
increase or decrease in stock is the difference in closing inventory from the previous statement.
if the company buys more and uses less, then cost of good sold is reduced by the increase (inventory has gone up).
vice versa, the company may buy X qty, but use some from the in stock ..as a result you will add to the cost of goods sold the amount consumed

hope this helps

Rohit Chauhan said...

Hi vik
why do you need BV for the stock ?
i dont have the number readily ..you can check it on any website like moneycontrol

rgds
rohit

Raja said...

Hi Rohit,

The company has announced a buy back at a price not exceeding 135/- for 10% of the outstanding equity.

You have any update with regard to the same ?

Regards
Raja