Friday 2 December 2016

Phoenix Mills turns outlier with demonetisation

It did not surprise when Modi government's demonetisation move, aimed to curb the use of black money, hit the real estate industry hard. The industry has for long been used to park such undeclared cash.This naturally led to investors' losing confidence in realty stocks. DLF, one of the largest real estatedevelopers, lost 24% since November 8 when the move to ban old notes of Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes was announced. Others such HDIL and Prestige Estate have lost near 19%. This took the 11 members BSE Realty Index down by 15% as 10 stocks fell. Sensex, The only outlier in the index is Phoenix Mills with its stock rising 8%. The Mumbai-based company is the biggest mall owner and operator in the country with a namesake chain of malls. This includes six million square feet of mall assets in Lower Parel area of Mumbai. It is among top three highest revenue earning malls in the country.    Commodity Trading Tips

"Phoenix remains relatively insulated as it is largely a rental-based model with marquee properties," said Adidev Chattopadhyay, an analyst with Elara Securities in a recent report. "We believe that the stock offers an attractive entry point at current valuations," he said.AK Prabhakar, head of research at IDBI Capital expressed similar views. "A majority of commercial property developers deal through banks, so demonetisation would not significantly affect them," he says. "In fact after demonetisation, a lot of consumption has shifted to organised retailers and malls which will benefit companies such as Phoenix," he says.    Nifty Trading Tips

It is not that mall operators are not affected by the government's move. Sales at retail chains have dropped. This will affect operators who earn through a fixed rental, besides revenue share from their tenants' business.    Future & Option Trading Tips

But the drop in retail sales is temporary compared to the structural impact on the sale of residential and commercial properties that have seen rampant use of cash. "Consumption at the malls have restored to 80-85 per cent of the normal levels," says Atul Ruia, joint managing director, at Phoenix Mills. "By January, we believe it will reach 100 per cent," he says. He declined to discuss the stock's recent performance.   Financial Astrology Tips

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