Bombay Rayon and Fashions Ltd: Buy
CMP: Rs.7.20
Book Value: Rs.21.28
High Sector P/E: 65.17
Market Cap: Rs.228 crore
Head Office: 3rd Floor, DLH Mangal Murti, Linking Road, Santa Cruz West, Mumbai - 400054.
Triggers:
#BRFL Textiles Private Limited (BTPL), the subsidiary of Bombay Rayon and Fashions Ltd is India's largest single-roof state-of-the-art fabric processing facility; supported by its captive power, effluent treatment, RO water, and other utilities enabling cost competitiveness.
BPTL is now almost DEBT FREE. It has a sprawling plant spread over few acres, which alone would be of value few hundred crores of rupees.
#Bombay Rayon Fashions Ltd. (BRFL) has a strong presence across the entire value chain, from fibre to yarn to textile to garment and fashion. A manufacturer of a wide variety of fabrics and garments, it was once the largest manufacturer of shirts in the country. The company operates through its manufacturing facilities in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala. The company has also one sampling unit in Mumbai.
#The state-of-the-art multi-fibre fabric processing unit also has a captive yarn dyeing unit with an annual capacity of 10.6 million kg (29 tonnes per day).
#BTPL’s solid and yarn dyed fabric, printing, processing, and finishing techniques are a mark of excellence.
#Interestingly, BRFL Textiles Private Limited (BTPL), has added several senior management to its team and grown its workforce from 1300 to over 2000 employees within two months of raising private equity funding.
BTPL has hired over 14 people in senior management roles across functions including a Chief Financial Officer, Processing In-Charge, Heads of various departments (HR, Designing & Product Development, Quality Assurance, IT, Compliance & Legal, Accounts & Finance and Taxation) and Senior Managers (in Sourcing, Sales, Marketing & Merchandizing), among others.
#In addition to the new hiring, the company has also introduced new employee focused initiatives including safety training, employee insurance assistance and an HR helpdesk to resolve employee queries.
#It has increased production at its Tarapur plant from 100,000 metres per day to now 150,000 metres per day as a consequence of improved capacity utilisation within few months of raising private equity funding.
#BRFL Textiles Pvt Ltd (BTPL) earlier raised Rs.240 crore (Rs.2.40 billion) equity infusion from a consortium of marquee financial investors led by JM Financial India Fund II (an Indian sector agnostic growth private equity fund), Think Investments (a San Francisco-based investment firm) and others.
The Company’s brands, including Bombay Rayon, BRFL, Linen Vogue, Giza Classe, Dickens & Browne and others, were also a part of the transaction.
#With strengthened workforce and management, BTPL aims to reach its annual processing capacity of 144 million meters (400,000 meters per day) over due course of time.
#BTPL’s Tarapur plant is a multi-fibre fabric processing unit — using cotton, linen, giza cotton, viscose, polyester, tencel, modal, lycra, along with their blends.
#BRFL Textiles Pvt Ltd, the subsidiary of Bombay Rayon and Fashions Ltd (Rs.7.25) and is almost debt free.
#Over the years, the fabrics from its Tarapur plant have earned the trust of its customers for its superior quality and design innovation and uniqueness. With the influx of PE funds, its manufacturing capacities are now being further leveraged to expand its output and market presence.
#BTPL has a strong presence in the B2B and B2C space alongwith long-standing relations with leading brands across the world.
#On the domestic branded sales front, the distribution network of BTPL is spread across its own EBOs, over 100 distributors and over 8,000 retailers.
#BTPL was formed as a separate entity in August 2020, as part of a restructuring process undertaken by Bombay Rayon Fashions Limited (BRFL), in which it hived-off its yarn dyeing & fabric processing units located in Tarapur, into BTPL by way of a slump sale on a going concern basis.
#The company’s brands, including Bombay Rayon, BRFL, Linen Vogue, Giza Classe, Dickens & Browne and others, were also a part of the transaction.
#Though the company has not declared its last two quarter results, it is likely to do so in a very short time, to conform to SEBI's compliant issues.
#Interestingly, the State Bank of India (SBI) in 2018 cut its losses in Bombay Rayon Fashions (BRFL), selling its Rs.2,261 crore exposure to JM Financial Asset Reconstruction Company (ARC) for Rs.900 crore, according to a report by the Financial Express. The state-owned lender took a 60% haircut on the loan. The cumulative debt of BRFL has been reorganised under the government’s corporate debt restructuring scheme. In addition to SBI, two other lenders hold equity stake in the textile company.
#In September, this year (CY2021), the FM, Nirmala Sitaraman said: "Inverted duty on textiles and footwear will be corrected from January 1, 2022. She was addressing the media after chairing the 45th meeting of the Goods and Service Tax (GST) Council in Lucknow. Currently, certain inputs are taxed at a higher rate than finished goods.
#Textiles and footwear businesses are unable to claim input-tax credit (ITC) because raw materials are taxed at a higher rate than the finished goods. For example, inputs into the MMF fabric segment (fibre and yarn) attract a GST rate of 18% and 12% whereas the GST rate on the MMF fabric is 5% and that for the finished goods apparel is 5% (for those with MRP less than ₹1,000) and 12 per cent (for MRP more than ₹1,000).
#The main impact of inverted duty structure is in the working capital of a businesses. It is because the GST paid at higher rates on raw materials is blocked till the government releases refund.
If this is changed then it would be great beneficial for the companies like Bombay Rayon and Fashions Ltd, who earlier struggled for working capital requirements.
#Bombay Rayon and Fashions Ltd is among the top 10 stocks with the highest DII holding in the June quarter.
#The stock of Bombay Rayon Fashions was one of the star performers in 2020. The share surged around 220% in 2020 to Rs.13.44 as of December 24, 2020, from 4.20 on December 31, 2019. This time too, the stock or BRFL could cross Rs.50, in the long term.
#Textile stocks generally start to rise from October/November or just before the beginning of winter.
#The COVID-induced market crash in 2020 and the subsequent recovery, easy availability of trading apps for the tech-savvy generation, work from home due to the pandemic and the pursuit of alternate sources of income seem to have fuelled the influx of retail investors.
The sector:
The textile sector has high P/E, which means a small rise in net profit could give a huge positive swing in the share price of any Textile company.
Besides, the textile fabrics market size is set to surpass $ 398.81 billion by 2025 at 5?67% CAGR. Moreover, soaring demand from medical sector is also expected to give a forward kick to industry growth, according to Market Research Future (MRFR).
According to MRFR study, the Textile Fabrics Market can thrive due to the upscaling demand for apparel and globalization of textile. The introduction of new urban fashion trends and hike in disposable income of people are other salient factors that are anticipated to the rise of textile fabric industry. The increasing exposure to social media and shift in shopping paradigm to robust digital platforms can add momentum to the market. The growing popularity of e-commerce and increase in professionals as influencers are observed to support high sales of appeals. Technological developments in the coated fabrics segment, along with aforementioned causes can significantly impact the textile.
Textile exports from India have surged as companies rush to tap the increased demand for cotton and yarn across the world amid a decline in supplies from China.
After the imposition of sanctions on China’s textile hub Xinjiang by the US, the UK and the European Union, experts now indicate that a power shortage in the neighbouring country will further benefit India’s textile exporters.
Exports of cotton yarn grew 5.50% to about 1 million tonnes during FY21 and shipments spiked by about 60 percent to 448,000 tonnes during April-July this year.
Economists said there could be a further increase in India’s cotton and textile exports as China faces power shortages.
Concern: There are no activities in the counter of Bombay Rayon and Fashions Ltd since last few weeks, but surprisingly the stock is still languishing in the T - group. The stock market regulators are requested to look into the matter and take necessary actions, so that it comes out of the T - group at the earliest.
Regulation is good but over - regulation is very bad - this is what is happening in the counter of BRFL.
Bibliography: