| Axis Bank Ltd (AXSB IN) 4Q14: Strong NIMs on better funding; stable asset quality | Overweight Price: Rs1,519.80 23 Apr 2014 Price Target: Rs1,600.00 PT End Date: 31 Mar 2015 | |
Axis Bank reported 4Q14 PAT of Rs18.4bn, up 19% y/y and 6%>JPMe. They key surprise was a sharp spike in margins – most other metrics were largely in line. We think the stock should continue to re-rate given the improving balance sheet quality with a larger share of retail. This offsets the growth and asset quality stresses from the wholesale loan book. Despite the recent rally, the stock is barely at -1sd and still offers value, in our view.
Table 1: 4Q14 result table
4Q13
|
3Q14
|
4Q14
|
YoY
|
QoQ
|
Comments
| |
NII
|
26,647
|
29,840
|
31,658
|
18.8%
|
6.1%
| |
Non-int inc
|
20,072
|
16,444
|
22,134
|
10.3%
|
34.6%
|
Includes Rs1.4bn of repatriation of profit from overseas branches
|
Opex
|
18,721
|
20,134
|
21,314
|
13.9%
|
5.9%
| |
PPOP
|
27,998
|
26,150
|
32,477
|
16.0%
|
24.2%
| |
Provisions
|
5,954
|
2,025
|
5,052
|
-15.1%
|
149.5%
|
Higher contingency provision of Rs2.55bn led to increase in provisions
|
PBT
|
22,044
|
24,125
|
27,425
|
24.4%
|
13.7%
| |
Tax
|
6,492
|
8,084
|
9,002
|
38.7%
|
11.3%
| |
PAT
|
15,552
|
16,041
|
18,423
|
18.5%
|
14.8%
| |
NIM
|
3.70%
|
3.71%
|
3.89%
|
0.19%
|
0.18%
|
Lower funding costs led to improvement in margins
|
ROA
|
1.70%
|
1.70%
|
1.78%
|
0.08%
|
0.08%
| |
Cost to Income
|
40.1%
|
43.5%
|
39.6%
|
-0.4%
|
-3.9%
| |
Tax rate
|
29.5%
|
33.5%
|
32.8%
|
3.4%
|
-0.7%
| |
Balance sheet data
| ||||||
Loans (Rs bn)
|
1,970
|
2,115
|
2,301
|
16.8%
|
8.8%
|
Loan growth driven by strong retail loan growth
|
Deposits (Rs bn)
|
2,526
|
2,624
|
2,809
|
11.2%
|
7.1%
| |
Credit to Deposit
|
78.0%
|
80.6%
|
81.9%
|
3.9%
|
1.3%
| |
CASA Ratio
|
44.4%
|
42.6%
|
45.0%
|
0.6%
|
2.4%
|
Higher Savings balances led to improvement in CASA
|
Asset Quality
| ||||||
Gross NPA
|
23,934
|
30,082
|
31,464
|
31.5%
|
4.6%
| |
Net NPA
|
7,041
|
10,034
|
10,246
|
45.5%
|
2.1%
| |
NPA coverage (%)
|
70.6%
|
66.6%
|
67.4%
|
-3.1%
|
0.8%
| |
Gross NPA (%)
|
1.06
|
1.25
|
1.22
|
0.16
|
-0.03
| |
Net NPA(%)
|
0.32
|
0.42
|
0.40
|
0.08
|
-0.02
| |
Non-interest income
| ||||||
Fees
|
16,182
|
14,560
|
17,800
|
10.0%
|
22.3%
| |
Trading profits
|
2,378
|
350
|
2,170
|
-8.7%
|
520.0%
| |
Misc
|
1,513
|
1,540
|
2,160
|
42.8%
|
40.3%
| |
Total Advances
|
1,969,660
|
2,114,673
|
2,300,668
|
16.8%
|
8.8%
| |
Large Corporates
|
977,038
|
1,024,373
|
1,022,378
|
4.6%
|
-0.2%
| |
SME
|
295,449
|
315,940
|
355,020
|
20.2%
|
12.4%
| |
Agri
|
157,573
|
133,100
|
178,360
|
13.2%
|
34.0%
| |
Retail
|
539,600
|
641,260
|
744,910
|
38.0%
|
16.2%
| |
Source: J.P. Morgan estimates, Company data.
· Margin spike. Margins rose 18bp q/q to 3.89%, ahead of expectations. Management attributed it largely to lower funding costs – improving CASA ratios (savings balances surged 12% q/q), FCNR deposits and increased share of retail in the TD portfolio. Management also mentioned that their FY15 margins are likely to stay above the bank’s traditional margin target of 3.25%-3.5%. Margins could stay strong through FY15 if rates stay elevated, given Axis’ gathering strength of the retail deposit franchise.
· Asset quality stable. Headline asset quality improved with NPL delinquency at 0.6% v/s 1.17% in the previous quarter. However, restructuring spiked at Rs11bn, 2.6% of loans. Management guided restructuring+slippages of Rs65bn (vs Rs57bn in F14); credit costs are expected to be flat next year. The stress continues to be focused on the large and mid-corporate segments: retail and SME asset quality has stayed very robust and show no signs of weakening.
· Strong retail growth. Retail assets grew 38% y/y and are now 32% of the loan book. Management sees strong growth in the segment driven by both strong demand and deepening distribution – retail assets are now sold out of 1700 branches. Internal origination is now ~33% of new retail loans. Incremental focus will be on non-mortgage segments such as LAP, auto loans and unsecured – this should be yield and margin enhancing over the next 1-2 years.
Table 2: Dupont table
1Q12
|
2Q12
|
3Q12
|
4Q12
|
1Q13
|
2Q13
|
3Q13
|
4Q13
|
1Q14
|
2Q14
|
3Q14
|
4Q14
| |
NIM
|
2.95%
|
3.42%
|
3.13%
|
2.82%
|
3.06%
|
3.23%
|
2.98%
|
2.91%
|
3.52%
|
3.56%
|
3.16%
|
3.06%
|
Fees/Assets
|
1.88%
|
2.06%
|
1.92%
|
1.90%
|
1.66%
|
1.92%
|
1.74%
|
1.93%
|
1.65%
|
2.13%
|
1.71%
|
1.93%
|
Opex /Assets
|
-2.28%
|
-2.50%
|
-2.21%
|
-2.23%
|
-2.18%
|
-2.42%
|
-2.09%
|
-2.05%
|
-2.21%
|
-2.37%
|
-2.13%
|
-2.06%
|
Provisions/Assets
|
-0.30%
|
-0.69%
|
-0.62%
|
-0.18%
|
-0.36%
|
-0.71%
|
-0.46%
|
-0.65%
|
-0.87%
|
-0.83%
|
-0.21%
|
-0.49%
|
ROA
|
1.61%
|
1.57%
|
1.61%
|
1.68%
|
1.62%
|
1.56%
|
1.61%
|
1.70%
|
1.73%
|
1.65%
|
1.70%
|
1.78%
|
Source: J.P. Morgan estimates, Company data.
Figure 1: Lower funding costs led to improvement in margins
Source: Company data.
Figure 2: Strong growth in savings balances led to improvement in CASA
Source: Company data.
Figure 3: Retail loans mainly comprises of secured housing loan portfolio
Source: Company data.
Investment Thesis
We are OW on the stock, as:
· The bank has significantly de-risked the balance sheet over the last year. The focus of the bank has been on low-risk retail loans, which we believe is a good strategy in the current weak macro environment. Retail loans now comprise ~32% of the loan book vs. 26% in 2Q14.
· The bank has focused on building a very strong retail franchise, and the aggressive branch push has started to yield results. The low-cost deposit for the bank has remained stable despite competition and the high rate environment, which has resulted in lower COF for the bank.
· We believe current valuations are attractive in the context of improving return ratios and hence expect the stock to re-rate further.
Valuation
Our Mar-15 PT of Rs 1,600 is based on a two-stage Gordon growth model implying 1.7x Mar-15E book. Our valuations factor in cost of equity at 16.4%, normalized ROE of ~19% and terminal growth of 5%.
Risks to Rating and Price Target
The key risks include: (1) The bank’s high exposure to large infrastructure projects could result in lumpy asset quality shocks in the medium term; and (2) Retail assets are the main growth driver for the bank, so any slowdown or increasing competitive scenario in retail loans could impact loan demand in the near term.
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