Foreign holding in Hindustan Unilever drops to four-year low

Foreign funds reduced their ownership of India’s largest staples company to 12.7% at the end of March, down from as high as 14.5% in June last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Global investors have cut holdings of Ltd. to a four-year low as the company grapples with weak consumer demand and rising competition.

Foreign funds reduced their ownership of India’s largest staples company to 12.7% at the end of March, down from as high as 14.5% in June last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The firm’s shares have slumped more than 9% in the past 12 months, the second worst performer in the NSE Nifty 50 Index.

Investors have sold Hindustan Unilever and its consumer-giant peers as they found it hard to justify the expensive valuations of the companies amid faltering sales growth. The firm has been facing competition from new-age brands, while lower agricultural yields have sapped demand among its rural customer base.


“Overseas investors will look at the parent company trading at less than half the valuation multiple,” said Abhay Agarwal, a fund manager at Piper Serica Advisors Pvt. in Mumbai. Revenue growth has slowed significantly and the “three-year sideways movement in the stock during a rising market has brought in some wariness,” he said.

While foreign funds have been selling, the proportion of Hindustan Unilever’s shares owned by domestic investors has risen to a record 13.2%, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Parent Unilever Plc and other members of the group own just over 60%, while retail investors have about 12%.

Local investors have to buy the company given its size and weighting in the benchmark index, Piper Serica’s Agarwal said.

Still, the decline in Hindustan Unilever shares this year has helped improve its multiples. The stock is currently trading at 46 times its forward earnings, below its five-year average of about 54 times.

“Consumer stocks focusing on the rural economy could see some positive momentum,” said Souvik Saha, an investment strategist at DSP Asset Managers Pvt. in Mumbai. Commentary from some of the consumer companies are indicating that the worst might be over, and some of key subsidies for the rural areas is set to continue, he said.

Hindustan Unilever is forecast to report net income of 24.7 billion rupees ($296 million) for the three months through March, a decline of 0.9% from a year earlier, according to the median estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg before it announces results Wednesday.

Source: Stocks-Markets-Economic Times

Последние публикации
US stock index futures edge higher; more Fed cues awaited
23.09.2024 - 14:00
EzFill holdings CTO Avishai Vaknin sells shares worth $2300
23.09.2024 - 14:00
Essent group CFO sells shares worth over $127,000
23.09.2024 - 14:00
Commerzbank, UniCredit shares fall as Germany plans to keep 12% stake
23.09.2024 - 14:00
Toppoint Holdings Files for Proposed IPO
23.09.2024 - 14:00
White House touts $1 billion fund to help auto suppliers retool for EVs
23.09.2024 - 14:00
Pro Research: Wall Street eyes Qualcomm's future beyond exclusivity
23.09.2024 - 14:00
JPMorgan prefers UK stocks over lagging eurozone peers
23.09.2024 - 14:00
HighPeak Energy CEO Jack Hightower buys $1.55 million in company stock
23.09.2024 - 14:00
UniCredit buys further 11.5% of Commerzbank in derivatives as it applies to get to 29.9%
23.09.2024 - 14:00
Constellation Energy PT raised at Wells Fargo & Morgan Stanley on TMI restart
23.09.2024 - 14:00
India stocks higher at close of trade; Nifty 50 up 0.57%
23.09.2024 - 14:00
Microsoft stock earns a rare Wall Street downgrade
23.09.2024 - 14:00
European shares edge higher as traders brace for data-packed week
23.09.2024 - 13:00
Samsung plans to invest $1.8 billion more in Vietnam for OLED manufacturing
23.09.2024 - 13:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Торговые идеи EUR/USD
Добро пожаловать в чат поддержки!
*
*

Ваш запрос успешно отправлен!
Скоро с вами свяжутся.