In a bid to improve farm yield, the investment in agriculture has been on a steady rise globally reviving the fortunes offarm-input companies. "Agriculture is the best, enterprise is acceptable, but being on a fixed wage is a strict no-no," thus goes an old Indian proverb.
Modern India has turned that adage on its head, and in an economy that's set to overtake China as the world's fastest growing, a high fixed wage is acceptable, enterprise is preferred, and agriculture, well, seems eminently avoidable. However, a grain crisis that erupted in the last few years has reinforced how central food security is to an economy, developed or emerging. The reality has dawned on policy makers that high food prices will cripple every other sectors of the economy, as consumers, struggling to put food on the table, tighten their purse strings on every other non-essential product. The world is today consuming more than what it makes, and massive farm-to-fuel programmes are limiting the available farmland for foodgrains. This practice is now under review in many countries ranging from the corn belt of the US to the sugar cane farms of Brazil. Back home, the government's investment in agriculture has grown steadily over the years and a boom in agri-commodity prices in the last couple of years means that the farmers are in a better position today to make long-term investments. For a long-term investor this is a good sign to invest in companies that supply key inputs to the agriculture industry. In view of this, ET Intelligence Group has cherry picked firms that could benefit from the rising demand for farm inputs and agricultural infrastructure. While the valuation of these stocks provides scope for appreciation, they could prove defensive bets in times of turmoil due to strong demand from agriculture segment. Food, after all, is a recession-proof business. Growing government investment The direct government expenditure in agriculture has seen a sharp rise over last five years enabling better farm credit and creation of support infrastructure like irrigation (See chart). As a result, over last few years India has seen a spurt in the capital formation in the agriculture sector including initiatives such as irrigation projects, rural roads and communication infrastructure, sales and marketing infrastructure, production of fertilizers and pesticides, agricultural education, research and development of agricultural technology. Schemes like National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) are also instrumental in improving the infrastructure in the rural areas. The global scenario is changing Under the Renewable Energy Directive (RED) passed by the EU Parliament in January 2009, bio-fuel blending of 5.75% is envisaged by 2010 to be scaled up to 10% by 2020. In the US the ethanol consumption is set to quadruple to 36 billion gallons by 2022. In India also, the government has mandated a 5% ethanol blending to be raised to 10% next year. All this is necessitating the world to invest more in improving farm yields. This needs optimum usage of pesticides, farm nutrients including fertilizers, creation of infrastructure such as irrigation, warehousing and transportation and usage of automated processes from tilling to harvesting. Over the last few years, consumption of food grains has risen faster than the growth in supply. Although the higher foodgrain production in 2009 has assuaged the fears about immediate food scarcity, long-term worries remain. Most of the agrocommodities witnessed a sustained rise in prices in the last couple of years, which are currently at nearly double their 2001 prices. These factors reinforce a sustained rise in the demand for the farm inputs in the years to come. In fact, after a sluggish spell of five years, for the first time in FY09 the agrochemicals industry worldwide witnessed a robust double-digit growth. Similarly, India's fertilizer industry, which was stagnating till FY04, has picked up growth in the last five years. India's fertilizer consumption, which rose at a CAGR of just 0.6% from FY98 till FY04, jumped to a CAGR of 5.6% subsequently. For FY08, the country consumed over 20.9 million tonne of three major farm nutrients viz. nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium. Five years back, the corresponding figure was 17 million tonnes. |
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Green shoots in investment in agriculture
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Agriculture
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