India: There is order in chaos

India: There is order in chaos

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This material is a financial promotion for the Stewart Investors Indian Subcontinent Sustainability Strategy intended for professional clients only in the UK, Switzerland, the EEA and elsewhere where lawful.

Investing involves certain risks including: 

>     The value of investments and any income from them may go down as well as up and are not guaranteed. Investors may get back significantly less than the original amount invested.

>     Specific region risk: investing in a specific region may be riskier than investing in a number of different countries or regions. Investing in a larger number of countries or regions helps spread risk.

>     Indian Subcontinent risk: although India has seen rapid economic and structural development, investing there may still involve increased risks of political and governmental intervention, potentially limitations on the allocation of the strategy's capital, and legal, regulatory, economic and other risks including greater liquidity risk, restrictions on investment or transfer of assets, failed/delayed settlement and difficulties valuing securities.

>     Currency risk: the strategy invests in assets which are denominated in other currencies; changes in exchange rates will affect the value of the strategy and could create losses. Currency control decisions made by governments could affect the value of the strategy's investments and could cause the strategy to defer or suspend redemptions of its shares.

Where featured, specific securities or companies are intended as an illustration of investment strategy only, and should not be construed as investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security.

All information included in this material has been sourced by Stewart Investors and is displayed as at 30 June 2024 unless otherwise specified and to the best of our knowledge is an accurate reflection as at this date. 

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Entropy is a measure of disorder in any system. India, on the surface, seems to have high entropy. But look beneath the surface and we find a surprising level of order and stability. This only becomes apparent if we observe India’s evolution over decades while avoiding the daily headlines that compete for our attention. We believe that such conditions make India an attractive destination for patient capital. We remain excited and hope to convey a bit of our conviction in this letter. A quick history tour is a good place to start.

India has re-elected her incumbent government, albeit in a coalition. Election results in India are important but we believe their importance has been overstated since 1991 in the context of investment returns. India’s economic progress has been sound and predictable over the last three decades, thanks largely to the 1991 consensus. Outside of the last 10 years, India has only had coalition governments. Coalition governments could drive more balanced and sustainable long-term growth.

Sustainable development in practice

Annualised returns in USD 1993 - 2023

Source: Lipper as at 31 December 2023

Consistency and continuity

Upon the foundations set by the 1991 consensus, the Indian economy has expanded at a rate of 8.8% GDP a year7 over the last three decades. The 1991 consensus has ensured there is continuity in reforms. The earlier stage of reforms included liberalisation of various sectors including, but not limited to, banking, telecoms, insurance, power, mining, and infrastructure assets such as roads, ports and airports.

India private sector profits as % of GDP 

  Source: Ambit Capita as at 30 July 2024

Privatisation of state assets is a work in progress. It is a slow evolution but rightly so given the many stakeholders involved. Reforms such as rural work programmes, bankruptcy laws, financial access, digitisation of payments and social security, Goods and Services Tax (GST) and inflation targeting, have been conceived, implemented and strengthened by successive governments. Areas such as electricity distribution, healthcare, education and rail transportation need policy intervention and, in some cases, more private sector participation to improve efficiency, quality and access.

Consequently, private sector profits as percentage of GDP has grown over the last three decades. We believe this trend should continue as India’s development is increasingly driven by the private sector. This bodes particularly well for long-term capital allocation and investment returns. In comparison, corporate profits to GDP in the US are currently 11%8.

With strong foundations in place, a few Indian companies are beginning to think big and are aspiring to build global franchises. This is particularly exciting for long-term investors. 

A goldmine for patient capital

The Indian market bears striking similarities to that of the US. Both economies are characterised by deep equity markets, open economies, long corporate histories, strong intellectual capital and entrepreneurial spirit, and political systems with checks and balances. In our view, any comparisons with China are misleading and unhelpful in the context of allocating capital long term. China and India have very different political systems and economic models. The Indian government’s role is increasingly limited to providing policy support, regulatory oversight and ensuring the benefits of development reach a larger section of society. In this context, it helps to look at the evolution of US and what the future might hold for patient capital in Indian equities. 

Evolution of the US and India
India GDP 2023 USD 3.4 trillion
India GDP per capita 2023 USD 2,600
US GDP 1982 USD 3.3 trillion
US GDP per capita 1955 USD 2,600
S&P 500 returns since 1982 10,800%
S&P 500 returns since 1955 78,300%

Source: Bloomberg as at 30 April 2024

We believe India should be home to a large domestic market which gives market leaders with long-term horizons fantastic opportunities. Take Blue Dart Express as an example. Blue Dart is India’s leading express logistics business with more than a 50% market share9. Blue Dart has built a reputation for trust and on- time delivery over the last four decades. This leads to sticky business. Blue Dart is following a different path to its competition by owning its assets. This allows it to focus on building network density while controlling its cost structure, a luxury its competitors will not have down the road. An ownership mindset, long-term horizon and a solid balance sheet has allowed Blue Dart to invest counter cyclically and build differently. Other logistics businesses such as FedEx and Old Dominion Freight Line have built admirable franchises in air and ground logistics respectively in the US over the last three decades. India has a similar geography and market potential. We believe Blue Dart has the right ingredients to build a large profitable domestic logistics franchise. 

Logistic business comparison 1994 2024
  Market
capitalisation
Revenue Operating
cash flow
Market 
capitalisation
Revenue Operating
cash flow
Fedex 4.0 8.5 0.76 74 87.0 8.3
Old Dominion 0.14 0.2 0.02 46 6 1.7
Blue Dart Express       2.3 0.65 0.1

Source: Bloomberg, all numbers in USD billion as at 31 July 2024

US companies went global in the last century powered by steady cash flows from a large domestic economy. The key ingredients required for that evolution were competence and long-term ambition. We also find those ingredients in some of our favourite Indian companies.

Triveni Turbines makes steam turbines and has a leading market position in India. It is now aiming to build a global franchise. Steam turbines are a standard fixture in most manufacturing facilities and often last for over 25 years. The main challenge for customers is to ensure turbine makers are around to service their equipment. Triveni, with steady family ownership and stewardship, provides this assurance. Very few competitors can compete with their time horizons. This service mentality builds trust and is now allowing them to access new customers across the globe. Servicing provides recurring cash flows, balancing the cyclicality of selling new equipment. Steam turbines improve manufacturing efficiency and reduce carbon footprints. These attributes should support long-term demand. Businesses with quality and trust as moats make a sound case for attractive long-term returns. Companies such as Triveni Turbines and also Elgi Equipments and CG Power are laying the foundations to build world class industrial businesses.

Amidst the volatility caused by macroeconomic news and short-term events, we remain focussed on what our companies could become in the coming decades. We take inspiration from the tremendous value created by a few quality businesses in the US in the last three to four decades noting that what was required of investors was patience and sitting on the share register through economic cycles. 

“Nature is not in a hurry, yet everything is accomplished” – Lao Tzu

Our investment approach is to back enduring qualities such as competent stewardship, standout cultures and sound business models tapping large future profit pools. This journey will never be linear. Some of our portfolio companies such as Mahindra & Mahindra, Tata Consultancy Services, Marico and Godrej Consumer Products have compounded returns at 18-25% in USD over the last 20 years10. During this period, India has had many macro shocks and stock market bubbles. Trading them around these events would have been detrimental to long-term returns, unless entry and exit timing was perfect. Something we are not good at. Instead, we try and be patient. The Stewart Investors Indian Subcontinent Sustainability strategy’s average turnover over the last decade is 15% and the average holding period of the top 10 holdings is 12 years11. A long-term client recently remarked “the more you trade, the more opportunities you give yourself to be wrong”. We could not agree more. On reflection we were better off sitting on our hands with some of our investments. We divest shares only when long-term valuations become expensive, the investment case has deteriorated or if there are better opportunities available.

Stewart Investors Indian Subcontinent Sustainability Strategy: Dabur investment over time

The strategy invested in Dabur in 2007 and held these shares until 2023. During this period, Dabur grew profits and dividends at 11% and 13% per annum respectively12 and the investment returned 1100%13. Dabur significantly outperformed the MSCI India index and as it was a high conviction and therefore large position in the strategy portfolio it contributed materially to the overall performance. We invested in a good business managed by competent stewards in a deeply underpenetrated consumer staples market. This time period witnessed many macro shocks such as the global financial crisis (2007-2008), taper tantrums (a surge in US treasury yields in 2013), anti-corruption protests, a change in government, demonetisation, the covid-19 pandemic and many quarters of subpar performance by Dabur. Ignoring the noise has yielded attractive returns. The investment case has remained simple but remaining invested for long periods is not easy. Patience is an integral part of our investment approach. We sold the position in Dabur in late 2023 as the valuation was expensive.

The strategy composite has delivered cumulative returns of 118% and 244% over the last 5 and 10 years to 30 June 2024 (USD net of fees). Since inception in 2003, the strategy has delivered a cumulative return of 4,209%. 

% Composite performance, USD net of fees as at 30 June 2024

Discrete annual performance 12 months
to 30-Jun-20
12 months
to 30-Jun-21
12 months
to 30-Jun-22
12 months
to 30-Jun-23
12 months
to 30-Jun-24
Composite returns -13.8 72.6 -4.8 22.4 25.7
Benchmark returns -17.0 57.0 -4.4 14.7 34.9
Cumulative performance Since launch 10 years 5 years 3 years 1 year 6 months 3 months
Composite returns 4209.2 243.9 117.9 46.5 25.7 17.2 16.2
Benchmark returns 1443.3 151.0 92.7 47.9 34.9 17.1 10.4
Annualised performance Since launch 10 years 5 years 3 years
Composite returns 19.1 13.1 16.9 13.6
Benchmark return 13.6 9.6 14.0 13.9

These figures refer to the past. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. For investors based in countries with currencies other than USD, the return may increase or decrease as a result of currency fluctuations. Source for the Stewart Investors Indian Subcontinent Sustainability Composite: Stewart Investors. Composite performance is shown on a net of fees basis. Net performance figures are calculated by subtracting a model annual management fee of 0.85% from the gross performance figures. No other expenses or costs have been taken into account when calculating the net performance. Source for MSCI India Index: FactSet, total returns, gross of tax. Performance calculated from launch of Stewart Investors Indian Subcontinent Sustainability composite on 1 January 2003.

These returns have been achieved thanks to outstanding stewards who are patiently building high quality businesses over decades. Such companies are an exception not the rule. The tail of our portfolios mainly serves to help us find these gems to which we can allocate a significant proportion of capital. 

Chaos does not mean risk

The political chaos and the steady news flow emanating from India’s sensationalist media is often perceived as a risk. We disagree. It is no different to what we see in any other democratic society. Au contraire, it helps long- term capital allocators with much needed transparency. India has broadly remained stable beneath this chaotic surface. A heterogeneous society, a competitive federal system, independent institutions that provide checks and balances and a healthy tug of war between various stakeholders forms the bedrock for long-term sustainable development.

The region is not without its risks. Tricky borders, climate change, rising inequality and rapid urbanisation are challenges to growth and productivity. Some of these problems can be addressed by sensible policy and patient capital. This has been the case since 1991.

Sashi Reddy
Stewart Investors

Foot notes

1 March 2004 to March 2014
2 BJP = Bharatiya Janata Party.
3 March 2014 to March 2024.
4 CAGR = Compound Annual Growth Rate.
5 Dates for MSCI India index returns: 13 May 2004 to 16 May 2014.  The second column is 16 May 2014 to 03 May 2024.
6 GDP = Gross Domestic Product.
7 Source: World Bank.
8 Source: Ambit Capital as at 29 July 2024.
9 Source: Blue Dart Express, Investor Presentation, 25 July 2024.
10 Bloomberg as at 30 April 2024
11 Source: Stewart Investors as at 30 June 2024.
12 Source: Dabur’s Financial Report
13 Source: Stewart Investors

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