By CA Surekha Ahuja
The Problem: Distortion, Not Data
Indian markets are information-rich yet insight-poor.
Financials are audited and detailed, but key metrics often mislead because they embed:
- Ind AS flexibility (measurement and timing choices)
- managerial discretion (especially RPTs)
- seasonal spikes (festive margins)
- regulatory influence from Reserve Bank of India and Securities and Exchange Board of India
Reported performance is directionally right—but economically incomplete.
The Shift: From Reading Numbers to Reconstructing Them
The BAV Framework (Business–Accounting–Valuation) from Harvard Business School (Krishna Palepu, Paul Healy) imposes a strict sequence:
Business → Accounting → Financials → Valuation
Most analysis starts at the end.
BAV starts at the source—validating whether the numbers are decision-grade.
Where Conventional Analysis Breaks
- P/E, EV/EBITDA: rely on unadjusted earnings → miss leases, RPT effects
- DCF: precise but assumption-heavy → fragile if the base is flawed
- Screens/Quants: fast, but only as good as reported data
BAV’s edge: it fixes the inputs before forming conclusions.
Four Steps, Practically Applied
1) Strategy — Moats with a Regulatory Lens
In India, advantage is partly regulatory.
Example: Reliance Industries
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Strong ecosystem, but outcomes are policy-sensitive
Action: apply a probability-weighted haircut where regulation drives returns.
2) Accounting — Recast to Economic Reality
Example: Trent Limited
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Lease-adjusted view increases leverage and lowers true ROE
Implication: risk and valuation both reset.
Without recast, sectors like retail are structurally misread.
3) Financials — Cash Validates Growth
Examples: Zomato, Nykaa
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Growth visible; cash conversion evolving
Checks: FCF vs PAT, working capital, DuPont ROE
Contrast: Avenue Supermarts → strong cash + efficient capital → durable compounding.
4) Valuation — Economics Over Optics
Anchor valuation to spread over cost of equity (rate-sensitive via RBI).
ROE > CoE creates value; otherwise it’s narrative.
High-Value Triggers (Use, Don’t Memorise)
- Lease-heavy models → recast leverage/returns
- High RPT + weak CFO → governance risk
- Revenue outpacing cash → quality risk
- Goodwill-heavy balance sheets → impairment risk
- Working capital stretch → capital inefficiency
- Outlier ROE → mean reversion
- Festive spikes → normalise margins
Where BAV Wins—and Where It Needs Judgment
Wins:
- Exposes accounting illusions
- Separates growth from economics
- Identifies durable models
Needs judgment:
- Markets price expectations and credibility (e.g., Reliance Industries)
- Cash flows are cycle-dependent, not point-in-time truths
- Promoter quality and capital allocation are decisive
- Timing: prices can diverge from fundamentals for long periods
What Changes for a Professional
- From reported metrics → adjusted reality
- From narratives → evidence
- From activity → disciplined selection
The edge is not more ideas—it is fewer, better decisions.
The Real Impact
Not higher hit rates—
but lower probability of large mistakes:
- leverage traps
- governance failures
- cash-flow mirages
This compounds.
Final Conclusion
Indian markets don’t lack data.
They misinterpret it.
BAV corrects this by:
- reconstructing numbers
- validating cash economics
- anchoring valuation to real returns
BAV is not a prediction tool.
It is an interpretation discipline that sharpens judgment and protects capital.
