Business Standard

Multiple negatives derail stock price of PNB Housing

Higher funding costs, uncertaint­y around stake sale has Street worried

- HAMSINI KARTHIK

The PNB Housing stock slid 5 per cent on Wednesday to ~1,006 apiece. The fall since the last week has been a sharp 24 per cent.

Despite the correction, experts believe there could be more downsides, citing three factors. They are the potential increase in cost of funds after the IL&FS turmoil, potential assetliabi­lity mismatch (ALM), and the proposed stake sale by PNB Housing’s promoters — Punjab National Bank and Carlyle group.

PNB Housing meets 35 per cent of its funding needs though non- convertibl­e debentures — mostly short-term instrument­s. Based on June 2018 (Q1) numbers, its cost of funds stood at 7.73 per cent and net interest margin (NIM) at 3.21 per cent.

In comparison, cost of funds stood at 7.71 per cent and NIMs were at 3.45 per cent, showing how rising interest rates are slowly pinching the company.

The lender’s Q1 investor presentati­on indicates a gap of ~51 billion of liabilitie­s over assets over the next 12 months, and a negative ALM of ~51 billion for liabilitie­s maturing in the next one to three years.

In a favourable interest rate scenario, rolling over liabilitie­s will not be an expensive propositio­n.

But in a liquidityc­runch situation, coupled with increasing interest rates, that is not the case. Analysts at Credit Suisse estimate that an 100 basis point (bp) increase in bond yield and 50 bp increase in bank rates could lead to a 49 bp increase in PNB Housing’s blended cost of funds. This could hurt net interest margin by 50 bps.

Further, unlike some other NBFCs that are able to pass on the higher interest cost, pricing power of housing finance firms is constraine­d given competitiv­e pressures from banks.

Irrespecti­ve of these developmen­ts, the proposed stake sale was already an overhang on the PNB Housing.

JP Morgan, with an ‘underweigh­t’ rating on the stock, has highlighte­d that pricing at which the transactio­n eventually closes will be key. “We expect stock volatility to be high as news around this develops,” it mentioned in a note.

To sum up, September quarter (Q2) results will be a key monitorabl­e. “Investors would want to be reassured about the ALM issue, which has now become a worry in the context of liquidity crunch,” says an analyst reviewing his ‘ buy’ rating on the stock. Till then, the Street expects the stock to remain under stress.

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