IANS | 02 Jan, 2024
India's capex upcycle is visible across the two largest segments viz.
housing and corporate capex now, which contribute 75 per cent to total
capex, foreign brokerage Jefferies said in a report.
This is over and above the strong trend seen in government's capex over the last five years.
The
housing upcycle is in the third year of upcycle and should still have
5+ years to go. For the corporate segment, overall capacity utilisation
is near 12-year high with examples being cement and power.
"Even
if government/infra capex spends cool off under budgetary pressure in
2024, we believe that large housing and corporate spending will drive
the capex levels higher," it said.
India's capex (GFCF) to GDP
ratio bottomed out in FY20 and has since risen by 270 bps, but is still
500-600 bps lower than the previous peak seen around 2010.
All
the three elements of the capex cycle (housing, corporate capex and
government capex) are now firing and hence the potential global slowdown
should have limited impact on India.
A combination of a strong
pent-up demand for housing, above average affordability and 12-year low
unsold inventory should drive a multi-year virtuous housing cycle. Ditto
for corporate capex with all-time low D/E ratio for the Indian
corporate, along with a decade-high capacity utilisation level and
well-capitalised banking system should drive corporate capex, the report
said.
"Capex has risen by a sharp 11 per cent/9.5 per cent YoY in
2Q/1HFY24. The broad basing of India's rising investment cycle is well
evident, but there is significant headroom here. The capex as percentage
nominal GDP should rise to a near-decade high of 30 per cent in FY24.
"We
believe though, there is a long way to go in the capex cycle. From the
capex cycle peak of GFCF being at 35 per cent of GDP, the investment
share in the economy declined to a low of 27 per cent in FY21," the
report said.
The GFCF has three major contributors -- households, government and corporate.
The
uptick in the housing cycle (since early 2021) and government/infra
capex have been more visible. Recently, data related to corporate capex
(new orders and project announcements, financing, utilisation levels,
etc.) point to the beginning of a private corporate spending upturn.
Capacity utilisation across sectors is trending higher.
Rising
utilisation levels (e.g. cement at 10-year high, thermal power at 81
per cent in FY25E, 8-year high), alongside power capex growth at a 20
per cent CAGR over FY23-26E vs. -1 per cent over the last 5 years.
Bottom-up analysis shows steel and cement projected capex over FY24-25E
should average 2x the past five years' run-rate for both sectors.
Railways
has emerged as a large capex driver too, with government spending from
its budget doubled over FY21-24E, the report said.