Business Standard

Operationa­l strength, subsidiari­es lend merit to State Bank’s re-rating

- VISHAL CHHABRIA & SHREEPAD S AUTE

Brokerages, both foreign and domestic, recently raised their rating on SBI with a target price of up to ~310, indicating potential upside of 50 per cent from the present ~207.

SBI’S ability to generate strong operating profit, a strong balance sheet (B/S), and strong growth potential of subsidiari­es justifies the re-rating potential, even though it comes when the banking system is exposed to asset quality risk.

Nitin Aggarwal, analyst at Motilal Oswal, says: “Besides lower funding costs (led by falling deposit rates), market share gains — both in advances and deposits — along with digital capabiliti­es will help SBI maintain strong momentum in pre-provisioni­ng operating profit (PPOP).”

“Even if bad loans rise on account of the Covid-led slowdown, SBI’S operating profit will keep it in good stead, to offset an increase in provisions,” said a fund manager at a domestic fund house.

In the last four years, SBI has posted average annual PPOP (excluding ~35,000 crore of cumulative trading income) of ~50,000 crore, which has helped absorb maximum loan loss provisions. Rising leverage and focus on digitisati­on should also help lower its higher cost-to-income ratio.

Additional support will stem from unrealised investment gains, which could account for 18 per cent of SBI’S loan loss provisioni­ng requiremen­t over the medium term, said Goldman Sachs in a recent report. SBI is also better placed in terms of asset quality. A large chunk, or close to 60 per cent of SBI’S loans, is to public-sector unit employees, while 60-95 per cent of retail advances are to PSU staff.

CLSA analysts, led by Adarsh Parasrampu­ria, say: “SBI is better positioned than peers in terms of Covid impact on asset quality, as its share of government/psu staff is disproport­ionately large.”

A B/S clean-up in the corporate segment in FY18 offers more comfort. The SBI management, during its June quarter analysts’ call, had indicated a slippage ratio of 1.5-1.6 per cent in FY21 in the base case due to Covid-19, lower than over 2 per cent in FY20.

Provisioni­ng coverage ratio (PCR) of 86.3 per cent for the June quarter was also among the highest, and its capital position (tier-1 ratio of 11.4 per cent) fared better.

Consequent­ly, many analysts foresee improvemen­t in the valuation of SBI’S core banking franchise, which was very low.

SBI’S investment across subsidiari­es and YES Bank is worth ~1.50 trillion. Excluding this from its m-cap of ~1.84 trillion, the residual value of ~34,000 crore for SBI’S banking business is lower than Bandhan Bank’s market cap of ~50,573 crore, Indusind Bank’s ~42,703 crore, and YES Bank’s ~35,753 crore.

While part of the holding company discount (15-20 per cent) may apply to investment­s in subsidiari­es, these businesses have grown well prior to Covid-19, and are expected to sustain the healthy growth.

CLSA says subsidiari­es (SBI Cards, SBI Life, and SBI Mutual Fund) are the best-inclass in their segments. These have grown at a CAGR of 25-40 per cent since five years, driven by SBI’S distributi­on strength. Their contributi­on also ensures that capital raising by SBI is not book-dilutive. Overall, riskreward for SBI remains favourable. Longterm investors may wait for a correction before entry.

Among downside risks include a prolonged slowdown, significan­t stress at YES Bank, and sharper-than-expected slippage of restructur­ed assets into bad loans.

Lalitabh Srivastava, deputy vice-president at Sharekhan, says: “We don’t see major downside risks from the Supreme Court order. While restructur­ing will help realign exposures, SBI’S robust PCR and operating metrics offers strong comfort.”

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