Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Westbridge Capital portfolio

WestBridge was co-founded by KP Balaraj, Sumir Chadha, SK Jain and Sandeep Singhal. 

WestBridge Capital Partners, which raised its debut fund back during the dot com boom days in 2000, was one of the first independent venture capital firms to take root in India and survive the crash.

In mid-2006, WestBridge merged its operations with US-based Sequoia Capital, one of the most blue chip firms in the business. Before merging, Sequoia and WestBridge had worked on two co-investments in India in BhartiTelesoft (now Comviva) and Mauj.

In 2011 the Westbridge team led by Sumir Chadha split from Sequoia to start making PIPE (private investment in public equity) deals in midcaps under their old avatar.

Westbridge Capital invests via its investment arm Jwalamukhi Investments. and its fund Westbridge Crossover Fund LLC




Friday, August 21, 2015

eClerx - Pivot to success

Most of us are very rigid in what we want be it our personal life or in business. But being persistent at the same time being flexible does seem to be a good idea too.Persistent in our journey but flexible with our paths may help us in a very big way. 

We all know eClerx as a KPO that differentiates itself with a lot of value addition when compared to the vanilla BPO. But has it been that way always ?. It seems that founder PD Mundhra follows the Tao saying about water going with the flow and by passing obstacles. Is this not what the startup world proudly calls Pivots ?. eClerx started off with doing mundane jobs and then climbing up the value chain.








http://forbesindia.com/article/independence-day-special/how-outsourcing-company-eclerx-found-its-foothold/40891/1

Water flows humbly to the lowest level.
Nothing is weaker than water,
Yet for overcoming what is hard and strong,
Nothing surpasses it. 

Lao-Tzu
Tao Te Ching

Saturday, August 8, 2015

100 bagger analysis


1) The most powerful stock moves tended to be during extended periods of growing earnings accompanied by an expansion of the PE ratio. And when I mention earnings, I mean earnings per share.

Likewise, the most powerful moves to the downside were during periods of decreasing earnings accompanied by PE contraction.

 2) These periods of PE expansion often seem to coincide with periods of accelerating earnings growth. By that I mean a period when earnings growth rates are not just being maintained, but are increasing sequentially

3) Some of the most attractive opportunities occur in beaten down, forgotten stocks which perhaps after years of losses are returning to profitability.

4) During such periods of rapid share price appreciation, stock prices can reach lofty PE ratios. This shouldn't necessarily deter one from continuing to hold the stock, as the uptrend can continue as long as the PEG ratio remains attractive (below 1, or preferably below .5).

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Indo Count dream run

No Holdings. Just some analysis in hindsight :-)

Pls click on picture to get a larger size image

Indo Count: The next SYMPHONY - Mudar Patherya

http://smartinvestor.business-standard.com/market/Marketnews-327645-Marketnewsdet-Indo_Count_The_next_symphony.htm#.VcCQdfmqqkp


Indo Count: The next SYMPHONY

Mudar Patherya/ 03 Aug 15 | 12:19 AM

Indo Count Textiles appreciated 5,600 per cent in the past couple of years, even as I kept saying 'The stock will technically correct,' but never did it happen. Welspun saw tenfold rise from its bottom levels. Himatsingka Seide stayed so terribly sluggish for months between Rs 80 and Rs 90 that just when one gave up, the stock doubled in four weeks.

It appears India's domestic textiles segment is being re-rated. Indo Count has been reporting stronger margins - 12.6 per cent in the last quarter of 2013-14 to 17.6 per cent in the last quarter. It has been reporting higher returns on employed capital - 7.6 per cent in 2010-11 to 34.5 per cent in 2014-15 (twice its largest competitor). It has transformed its bottom line from Rs 10.66 crore in 2010-11 to Rs 145.88 crore in 2014-15.

It would be simplistic to ascribe this to the 'textile cycle'. There is something deeper at work here.

In this capital-intensive sector, Indo Count graduated towards asset lightness. The company began to experiment successfully with outsourcing (buying grey fabric from other companies) over insourcing (backward integration) and focusing on grey fabric processing over manufacturing everything under one roof. The result: a superior return on employed capital in a capital-intensive sector translated into a consistent increase in profitability.

Even as the company was a part of the corporate debt restructuring programme, it expanded processing capacity from 36 million metres per annum to 45 million metres per annum and 68 million metres per annum - through accruals. In 2015, Indo Count will implement incremental expansion at a substantially lower cost (processing capacity increase 88 per cent at 40 per cent of the original greenfield processing cost), expected to generate an unprecedented payback.

Concurrently, Indo Count graduated from the low-mid product segment to the mid-to-high (marked by progressively higher thread counts), expanded horizontally (from an erstwhile bed sheet focus to fashion bedding, utility bedding and institutional bedding), graduated from 'made to stock' to 'made to order', increased inventory turns and committed to capital investments only after receiving reasonable purchase commitments by customers.

The result is that Indo Count exited from its corporate debt restructuring plan four years ahead of schedule, after paying a recompense amount of Rs 26 crore to banks in 2015 in lieu of the preponed exit.

One would assume the big play in Indo Count would be over. Yes and no. Yes, because it would be unrealistic to expect similar percentage returns in market cap growth from this point onwards. No, because the company is likely to generate far more cash (following its low cost expansion) than it can hope to consume, helping pare (or even eliminate) working capital.

When you have a topline of about Rs 3,000 crore, earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation margin of even 15 per cent (I am a pessimist) and no debt on your books, you have people willing to price you differently.

Wonder if this could be the next SYMPHONY

The author is a stock market writer, tracking corporate earnings and investor psychology to gauge where markets are not headed