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Sunday, November 30, 2008

SBI - Buy


Investors looking for a large-cap stock which will add value to their portfolio can consider accumulating the State Bank of India stock in declines. Beaten down valuations, strong financials in an extremely challenging macro environment, with sustainable growth in advances, make the bank stock attractive.

At the current market price of Rs 1086, the stock trades at a modest trailing 12-month PEM of 8.5, at 1.4 times its March book value, without assuming any value for subsidiaries.

Though the bank trades at a premium to all public sector banks, this appears justified given the size of its balance-sheet and the huge market share, despite which it has delivered better financial performance than its peers. Market share for the bank has improved in recent quarters.

A high proportion of low-cost deposits, a corporate loan focus, scope for merger gains from consolidation and strong ‘other income’ growth are key triggers to earnings growth over the next few quarters. The bank has a return on equity (ROE) of 16.75 per cent and ROA of 1.01 per cent for FY-08 and is expected to maintain these this year.

Financials

The net profit of SBI (standalone) has grown at 16.7 per cent, compounded annually in the last five years. In the first half of FY-09, it reported a 28 per cent net profit growth.

The growth in profits can be attributed to strong advances growth of 31 per cent in a year which, in turn, helped net interest income growth of 29 per cent.

Advance growth was driven mainly by growth in advances to corporates and SMEs.

Though the bank hiked its PLR by 75 bps at the start of the September quarter, it managed to improve its market share in advances from 15.61 per cent to 16.01 per cent sequentially.

The PLR hike helped improve the net interest margins (3.16 per cent) both quarter-on-quarter and over the last year. A high proportion of low-cost deposits (40 per cent) helped in containing the cost of funds.

In the first half of the fiscal, non-interest income growth of 49 per cent was helped by growth in core fee income. Fee-income growth can be partly due to the increase in processing fee for various products. The bank’s operating expenses have grown marginally by 13 per cent due to staff costs and employee provisions.

Operating profits of the bank increased by 60 per cent y-o-y but the growth couldn’t be translated into net profit growth due to higher provisioning requirements for bond depreciation and provisions for NPA (Rs 911 crore). However, there might be write-backs in the bond portfolio in the coming quarters, on the back of falling yields.

Gross NPA/advances of the bank have come down from 3.07 per cent to 2.51 per cent in a year but is still high compared to most of its peers. The provisioning coverage of the bank at 47 per cent is among the lowest and may make it more vulnerable to any deterioration in asset quality.
other businesses

The merger with State Bank of Saurashtra in the current fiscal has come with lot of opposition, which affected the day-to-day operations of the banks. SBI has to provide for Rs 370 crore as a past service liability with respect to provident fund and pension liabilities for the merging operations.

The bank is expected to merge six other associate banks (such as State Bank of Hyderabad, State Bank of Patiala and Indore), after a review of this merger. The associate banks posted a net profit of Rs 978 crore, about 30 per cent of SBI’s standalone profits, and have scope for improving margins on the back of better efficiencies.
Outlook

SBI lowered its PLR in November, following the rate cut and other liquidity-easing measures by the RBI. That the deposit rate cut is lower than the lending rate cut may put pressure on net interest margin in coming quarters. But the spreads between lending rates between PSU banks and private banks are now so high that PSU banks may continue to sustain stronger advances growth. Such a shift is already noticeable with retail advances.

While private banks have been going slow on these advances, PSBs have seized the opportunity to lend aggressively.

SBI has 10,764 branches; the bank plans to open another 1,000 branches in FY-09. That may aid the banks’ efforts to attract low-cost deposits. With more than 98 per cent of branches of SBI CBS-enabled, processing times may also fall drastically.

Fee income avenues such as cross-selling of products are largely untapped for SBI and the potential to grow is, therefore, high.

Right now, the bank’s ‘other income’ is only 30 per cent of the net revenues (as much as 50 per cent for private banks). Over the long term, listing of the insurance business may also unlock value for the bank. Of the advances, 80 per cent is are un-rated, which earlier attracted a 150 per cent risk-weight, but now attract only a 100 per cent weight.

This will temporarily help in improving the capital adequacy ratio of the bank. The bank intends to get these un-rated accounts rated in the near future.

The lowering of standard advances provisioning to 0.4 per cent of total assets, may also see reduced provisioning in future.
Risks to earnings

Employee costs are set to increase as the bank plans to recruit 25,000 people this fiscal.

Slippages in asset quality and a relatively low capital adequacy ratio (11.51 per cent) are concerns which the bank has to address in the coming quarters.

The loss incurred in the card business and retail portfolio can aggravate, if tough macro conditions persist.