D-Mart shares drop 9.4% to ₹4,143.60 on the BSE on Monday

Avenue Supermarts shares plummet 9% on weak Q2; here’s what analysts say

Shares of Avenue Supermarts, which owns and operates D-Mart stores, plunged over 9% in opening trade on Monday after the supermarket chain reported weak earnings in the September quarter of the current fiscal. The Radhakishan Damani-led company has posted tepid growth in July-September period amid lower productivity of stores as well as fast ramp-up of quick commerce services in large metro cities.

On Monday, Avenue Supermarts shares opened lower for the third straight session at ₹4,247.95, down 7% against the previous closing price of ₹4,572.35 on the BSE. Extending opening losses, the DMart retail chain operator’s stock declined as much as 9.4% to ₹4,143.60, while the market capitalisation slipped to ₹2.77 lakh crore.

Shares of Avenue Supermarts touched its 52-week high of
₹5,484 on September 24, 2024, and a 52-week low of ₹3,618.85 on October 25, 2023. The retail stock has given 9% returns in the last one year and nearly 4% in the calendar year 2024. In the past six months, the counter lost 10%, while it eroded 19% in the last one month.

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For the second quarter ended September 30, 2024, Avenue Supermarts reported 5.77% growth in its consolidated net profit at ₹659.58 crore as compared to ₹623.56 crore during the same period last year. Revenue grew 14.41% to ₹14,444.5 crore, up from ₹12,624.37 crore in the year ago period. On the operating front, earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (EBITDA) rose by 29.3% to ₹1,093.8 crore, from ₹846 crore in the corresponding previous of the last fiscal.

Analysts view on D-Mart’s Q2

Citing disruption from quick commerce, ICICI Securities has downgraded Avenue Supermarts shares to “Reduce” from “Add”, with a revised target price to ₹4,100 per share from ₹5,400 earlier. “Overlap of consumers seeking convenience and shopping at DMART (value) appears to be higher than expected which should continue to impact its growth trajectory. Further, scale-up of DMART Ready continued to be significantly lower (+21% YoY in 1HFY25) vs quick commerce despite lower absolute size,” it says in a note.

“We cut our earnings estimates by 14% / 17% for FY25E/FY26E due to lower revenue growth assumptions (impact of quick commerce) and operating margins (due to operating deleverage), modelling revenue/ EBITDA/PAT CAGR of 17%/16%/15% over FY24-26E,” the brokerage says.

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Another domestic brokerage Nuvama has retained ‘HOLD’ on the stock, but cut the price target to ₹5,040 from ₹5,183 earlier. “Building in the impact of online grocery players and weakness in Dmart’s H1FY25 showing, we are cutting FY25E revenue/EBITDA/PAT by 3%/4%/7%,” it says.

The report highlights that D-Mart Ready’s growth slowed to 22% YoY in H1 FY25 from 32% in FY24. “Management acknowledged that online grocery formats are having a noticeable effect on its high-performing metro stores.”

Meanwhile, Motilal Oswal has maintained a ‘BUY’ rating on the stock with a target price of ₹5,300. However, the brokerage lowered the earnings estimates amid weaker store productivity. “D-Mart added six stores in Q2 FY25 (12 in H1 FY25). Accelerated store additions remain the biggest growth driver for D-Mart and we expect the pace of store additions to pick up in H2 FY25 (four added in Oct’24).”

“We lower our FY25/FY26 revenue estimates by 2/4%, EBITDA estimates by 6/10% and EPS by 8%/14%, as weaker store productivity and higher CoR offset slightly higher store additions,” it says in a report.

(DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed by investment experts on fortuneindia.com are either their own or of their organisations, but not necessarily that of fortuneindia.com and its editorial team. Readers are advised to consult certified experts before taking investment decisions.)

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