Business Day

SA may one day have a ‘ big five’ in banking

- STUART THEOBALD ● Theobald is chair of Intellidex, a research-led consultanc­y.

It is astounding how many countries settle on a banking system of four top banks. The UK, Kenya, Australia, the US, India and Spain are among the many examples. Indeed, it is hard to think of exceptions — Switzerlan­d is down to a big two after UBS’s takeover of Credit Suisse. Japan has a big three. France has a big six. But these are a far less common pattern.

SA might have become a “big three” country had then-finance minister Trevor Manuel allowed Nedbank ’ s takeover attempt of larger rival Standard Bank in 2000. His decision locked SA into the “big four” model we now have.

Why is it that the world over, four seems a stable equilibriu­m in banking? I pondered this pattern in reviewing Capitec’s financial results that were released last week. Given its continued outperform­ance in profitabil­ity, it could one day break the model.

Capitec for now seems the only bank with a prospect of doing so. Investec remains a serious competitor in niches at the top end of the market and some areas of investment banking, but growth in SA has been sluggish. We have recently had several new entrants including Discovery Bank and TymeBank that may one day be contenders, but not yet.

The global prepondera­nce of the ‘ big four’ model suggests it is some form of stable equilibriu­m. More banks should make for a more competitiv­e industry and arguably better customer service. Fewer banks make for economies of scale, and a generally safer sector with more diversifie­d portfolios and capable of larger single exposures. A four-pillar system is also easier to regulate, allowing authoritie­s to focus their attention. It seems to be the Goldilocks bank market structure — just enough competitio­n but just enough stability.

So how could a newcomer break into this club? Capitec remains small — while its growth in its 22 years of existence has been impressive, it still commands only 2.6% of deposits in the market. Investec has had a banking licence for 43 years and has 7.8%. Discovery Bank, the biggest of the recent new entrants, has 0.2%. But the big four command 84.5% between them.

Small, however, can be beautiful. Capitec’s results last week showed return on equity (ROE) of 26%, beating FirstRand ’ s 22.5% in 2022 and the other bigger banks in the mid-teens.

We will be getting Investec’s results in May, but its target ROE is also in the mid-teens. ROE is the main driver of bank growth because it creates the capital that allows it to expand balance sheets. So, if a bank is sustainabl­y more profitable than the rest of the market, it is inevitable that it will gain market share. Either Capitec will be one of the big four (or big five) one day, or it will be less profitable. Those are the only two options.

Capitec clearly intends to continue growing. Its history provides a textbook model of how to break into an oligopoly.

It got its foothold by being the only bank to understand what the National Credit Act meant for credit markets when it was introduced in 2005. It moved into the unsecured lending space that was opened while the other banks were caught napping. That gave it profits which it used to invest in diversific­ation.

As it gained traction it improved its funding mix, shifting out of wholesale towards deposits. It diversifie­d revenue, shifting from interest earnings to transactio­n fee income. Now, of its 20.1-million active clients, just 1.3-million are credit clients. The focus of its growth ambitions has more recently shifted to business banking and insurance — another big step towards becoming a full-service bank.

There are obviously big gaps that distinguis­h Capitec from larger rivals. It does nothing in corporate and investment banking, which account for about 40% of bigger rivals’ businesses. It has big gaps in the retail market too, with no vehicle finance (though it offers personal loans for this) and no home loans (though it offers them through a partnershi­p with SA Home Loans).

These home loans could be shifted onto Capitec’s balance sheet in future, as it is now doing with its credit life business that was previously done with a partner. It is also purely an SA operation, while its rivals all have operations elsewhere to varying degrees.

Its business banking model is focused on SMEs, which it believes are underservi­ced, with a serious digital offering. But I suspect the big opportunit­y for Capitec will depend on regulatory change — shifting the regulation­s that now make it impossible to lend to informal businesses and start-ups under the National Credit Act.

That legislatio­n is under the purview of the department of trade, industry & competitio­n, and that department has historical­ly shown indifferen­ce to how it could improve conditions for SME finance. Were it to one day change though, Capitec could repeat what it did in unsecured retail lending in the small business sector.

The challenge for Capitec is to grow while maintainin­g its profitabil­ity. It sits at a price-tobook ratio of twice its bigger rivals, which roughly means shareholde­rs expect it to grow at roughly twice their rate. That is a hard expectatio­n to meet forever, and Capitec faced a bruising response from shareholde­rs when it disappoint­ed the market with earnings guidance earlier in 2023.

As it gets closer to the big four ’ s turf, it has to face up to their economies of scale, while navigating regulators who prefer to keep the peace. It will be a hard slog to challenge the long-running equilibriu­m.

CAPITEC FOR NOW

SEEMS LIKE THE ONLY

ONE WITH PROSPECTS

OF JOINING

THE BIG FOUR

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa