Business Standard

Axis Bank shares crash 10% as asset quality worsens

Brokerages cut price target and earnings forecast

- SAMIE MODAK & AGENCIES

Shares of Axis Bank dropped most in two years after its profit missed the Street’s expectatio­ns amid worsening asset quality. The stock fell 9.4 per cent to close at ~465, eroding over ~10,000 crore from its market valuation. The bank’s gross non-performing assets for the September quarter stood at 5.9 per cent, against 4.17 per cent a year ago. It reported ~430-crore net profit on Tuesday, lower than analysts’ forecast of ~1,320 crore.

Shares of Axis Bank dropped on Wednesday by the most in two years, after the third largest private sector lender’s profit missed Street expectatio­ns, amid worsening of asset quality. The stock declined 9.4 per cent to close at ~465, with a little more than ~10,000 crore of value getting eroded.

Axis reported gross non-performing assets (NPAs) of 5.9 per cent for the quarter ended September, compared with 4.17 per cent for the same quarter last year. It reported net profit of ~430 crore on Tuesday, after the market closed, much lower than the analysts’ forecast of ~1,320 crore.

The disappoint­ing results spooked investors and sparked concerns about the recovery of stressed assets in the banking sector. Most banking stocks also saw sharp declines, even as the benchmark indices remained flat.

ICICI Bank fell four per cent and State Bank of India declined three per cent. The BSE Bankex, a gauge for performanc­e of stocks in the segment, fell 1.8 per cent. In comparison, the benchmark BSE Sensex fell 0.1 per cent.

The 12-month consensus price target for the Axis Bank stock saw a five per cent cut, accordint to data provided by Bloomberg.

At least half a dozen brokerages, including Morgan Stanley, BNP Paribas and JP Morgan, cut their price target on the stock by five to 12 per cent.

Analysts see pressure on profit, as the bank expects credit costs to go up. Chief Financial Officer Jairam Sridharan, in a conference call, said these costs for the year would amount to 220 to 260 basis points (bps), higher than earlier estimate of 175 to 225 bps, due to higher slippage in bad loans.

The results were “the most disappoint­ing quarterly earnings” as it missed on all key operating parameters, according to a note from Goldman Sachs Group, which cut its price target on the stock by three per cent to ~431.

“Continued disappoint­ment from outside watch-list slippages has rattled investors’ confidence, as the sanctity of watch-list claims stands challenged. Not only was stress creation much higher than anticipate­d but the road to recovery is also expected to be arduous,” said a note by Edelweiss.

The brokerage cut its FY18 earnings estimate by 30 per cent and downgraded the stock to ‘hold’, from ‘buy’. It cut the price target to ~545, from ~638 earlier.

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