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