India Inc's credit metrics are likely to show further improvement in the September quarter, a domestic rating agency said on Friday.
The recent trends in softening of commodity prices, price hikes by companies, and anticipation of a favourable demand are the factors helping the industry, Icra Ratings said.
The interest coverage is likely to improve to 4.5-5 times in the July-September period from 4.5 times in the June quarter, the agency said, adding that inflationary trends remain a monitorable.
"India Inc's ability to improve earnings will depend on its ability to navigate ongoing headwinds such as tepid growth in the developed markets and impact of fluctuations in foreign exchange on import as well as export-oriented sectors," its Co-Group Head for Corporate Ratings Kinjal Shah said.
Sequential improvement in operating profit margin was the most visible in sectors such as aviation, oil and gas, retail and auto brands, Shah said, adding that the evolving geo-political situation presents uncertainities on the profitability front.
The agency said rate hikes of 2.5 per cent undertaken by the RBI since last May have had a bearing on the interest coverage ratio for the quarter and tempered the benefits accruing through margin improvements.
Also Read
UBS Group completes takeover of Credit Suisse to create bank titan
What are cashback credit cards? Which are the best ones? How to pick?
Your credit card payments overseas will attract a 20% TCS from July 1
HDFC Bank's premium co-branded credit card with Marriot: Is it worth it?
J&K witnessing improvement in security due to counter-terrorist operations
93% of Rs 2,000 notes worth Rs 3.32 trillion returned since May: RBI
Moody's raises India's growth forecast to 6.7% for 2023, lowers it for 2024
GST collection grows 11% YoY to around Rs 1.6 trillion in August: Govt
India manufacturing PMI grows to three-month high in August: S&P Global
Morgan Stanley ups India's FY24 economic GDP forecast while BofA cuts
The interest coverage ratio was 5.2 times in the first quarter of 2022-23, which weakened to 4.5 times in the June quarter of the current fiscal, the agency said, adding that the improvement is on the back of the extended pause in policy rates and an expected earnings revival.
An analysis of 591 listed companies, excluding financial sector entities, revealed an improvement in operating profit margins, aided by softening in commodity prices, coupled with a favourable demand situation.
"While revenue growth is anticipated to continue into the September quarter, aided by expected stable demand and start of the seasonally-strong festive period, the ability of corporate India to sustain the same remains to be seen, given the macro-economic uncertainties, and impact of inflation on the demand momentum," Shah added.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)