Any company which earns by exports are bound to benefit by the depreciating rupee. Though it is common for many of these exporters to hedge there currency exposure to shield from downturn, there is possibility of higher revenue from future revenues.
Following are few companies which derive majority of their revenue from overseas. Apart from them you have a host of companies including Textile exporters which benefit due to appreciating dollar. The list of companies given below is not inclusive of all the companies which export. This is just an indicative list. Also do a complete market research about these companies before investing.
Tata Steel: Europe constitutes 65 per cent of total revenues.
Profitability of European operations also has considerable sensitivity to
Consolidated earnings (every US$5/t change in Europe EBITDA = 20 per cent
improvement in consolidated earnings).
Hindalco: The
aluminium major's 64 per cent of revenues and 67 per cent of EBITDA come from
US/Europe and Latin America.
TCS: It generates 92 per
cent revenues from US and Europe. Strong beneficiary of recovering US economy
and structural shift in favor of offshoring in continental Europe. Discretionary
IT services spending likely to get strong boost as global recovery gains
traction. In current environment remains insulated from India macro weakness.
Tech Mahindra: The company's 93 per cent of revenues
come from the US and Europe. Competitive pricing and stronger balance sheet
should help Tech
MahindraBSE 1.81 %
gain market share. Stock trades at a 30 per cent discount to large cap IT
service peers, an arbitrage that should correct, following market share gains.
In current environment remains insulated from India macro weakness
Infosys: It generates 97 per cent of revenues from US
and Europe. The company is likely to use rupee depreciation as a competitive
lever to rebuild lost market share. In current environment remains insulated
from India macro weakness
Wipro: The company's 90 per
cent of revenues come from US/Europe. In current environment it remains
insulated from India macro weakness.
Reliance
Industries: Refining and petchem businesses make for 88 per cent of
EBITDA, where margins are driven by global factors. It remains highly insulated
from domestic macro issues.
United Phosphorous: Its 80
per cent of revenues are derived from exports and foreign subsidiaries,
considerably hedged against the weakening domestic macro situation.
Tata Motors: Nearly 75 per cent of revenues and 85 per
cent of EBITDA is derived from JLR which is linked to markets like US, Europe
and China.
Bharat Forge: The company generates 45 per
cent of revenues derived from US and EU truck markets which are seeing strong
demand recovery.
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Good info
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