<p>For 18 months, as Infosys Ltd shares slumped from a record high, the only consistent “sell” rating on India’s most widely held stock came from a 29-year-old analyst at an investment group little known outside the country.</p>.<p><br />Other analysts have joined Ankur Rudra in downgrading Infosys, but he says clients were initially sceptical of his call on a company famous for consistently exceeding expectations.<br />“How can you be right? How can you know more than what the management knows?” he recalls them asking.</p>.<p><br />Rudra’s report on the Indian IT services sector, titled “Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall...” and describing Infosys as living in “limbo land”, was issued on January 14 last year, just after the stock peaked.<br /><br />Since then the company has lost a third of its value on a series of disappointing revenue forecasts and other announcements that have rattled investors. <br /><br />Rudra, who studied electrical engineering before becoming an analyst seven years ago, said in the report that the “sell” rating reflected “stratospheric long-term expectations” built into valuations for the IT bellwether.</p>.<p><br />The valuations of Infosys and rival Tata Consultancy Services were both around 21 times 12-month forward earnings at the time. Now, Infosys trades at about 13 times forward earnings compared with 17 times for TCS.</p>.<p><br />Globally, analysts can be shy about putting sell ratings on stocks because that can make it harder for their firms to win advisory business and can irritate the management of companies.</p>.<p><br />Just 9 per cent of analyst recommendations by banks and brokerages globally were a “sell”, based on more than 120,000 recommendations issued on nearly 17,000 companies, according to a Reuters study of StarMine data.<br />In India, 18 per cent of analyst recommendations are a “sell” or a “strong sell”, according to current Starmine data.<br /><br />“Most firms want to be objective, but tend to be crowd-pleasing. So when you put sell on a stock, not only do you cheese off management teams, you also cheese off holders a lot,” Rudra said, adding that he faced no backlash from Infosys management.<br />Ambit, an independent Mumbai-based house, unusually only has “buy” or "sell" ratings after scrapping the “hold” option in June 2011. About 40 per cent of its recommendations are sell.</p>.<p><br />Thomson Reuters StarMine gives Rudra a ranking of five stars, the highest level, based on his calls on stock moves. For Infosys’ rivals, he has a “buy” rating on top-ranked Tata Consultancy Services and a “sell” on third-placed Wipro.<br />Of the 55 analysts covering Infosys and tracked by Thomson Reuters StarMine, five have a “sell” rating and one has a “strong sell”. Of the remainder, 23 are neutral and 26 rate Infosys a buy or strong buy.<br /></p>
<p>For 18 months, as Infosys Ltd shares slumped from a record high, the only consistent “sell” rating on India’s most widely held stock came from a 29-year-old analyst at an investment group little known outside the country.</p>.<p><br />Other analysts have joined Ankur Rudra in downgrading Infosys, but he says clients were initially sceptical of his call on a company famous for consistently exceeding expectations.<br />“How can you be right? How can you know more than what the management knows?” he recalls them asking.</p>.<p><br />Rudra’s report on the Indian IT services sector, titled “Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall...” and describing Infosys as living in “limbo land”, was issued on January 14 last year, just after the stock peaked.<br /><br />Since then the company has lost a third of its value on a series of disappointing revenue forecasts and other announcements that have rattled investors. <br /><br />Rudra, who studied electrical engineering before becoming an analyst seven years ago, said in the report that the “sell” rating reflected “stratospheric long-term expectations” built into valuations for the IT bellwether.</p>.<p><br />The valuations of Infosys and rival Tata Consultancy Services were both around 21 times 12-month forward earnings at the time. Now, Infosys trades at about 13 times forward earnings compared with 17 times for TCS.</p>.<p><br />Globally, analysts can be shy about putting sell ratings on stocks because that can make it harder for their firms to win advisory business and can irritate the management of companies.</p>.<p><br />Just 9 per cent of analyst recommendations by banks and brokerages globally were a “sell”, based on more than 120,000 recommendations issued on nearly 17,000 companies, according to a Reuters study of StarMine data.<br />In India, 18 per cent of analyst recommendations are a “sell” or a “strong sell”, according to current Starmine data.<br /><br />“Most firms want to be objective, but tend to be crowd-pleasing. So when you put sell on a stock, not only do you cheese off management teams, you also cheese off holders a lot,” Rudra said, adding that he faced no backlash from Infosys management.<br />Ambit, an independent Mumbai-based house, unusually only has “buy” or "sell" ratings after scrapping the “hold” option in June 2011. About 40 per cent of its recommendations are sell.</p>.<p><br />Thomson Reuters StarMine gives Rudra a ranking of five stars, the highest level, based on his calls on stock moves. For Infosys’ rivals, he has a “buy” rating on top-ranked Tata Consultancy Services and a “sell” on third-placed Wipro.<br />Of the 55 analysts covering Infosys and tracked by Thomson Reuters StarMine, five have a “sell” rating and one has a “strong sell”. Of the remainder, 23 are neutral and 26 rate Infosys a buy or strong buy.<br /></p>