Singapore, 5 November 2008 - Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited (“OCBC Bankâ€) today reported a net profit of S$402 million for third quarter 2008 (“3Q08â€), 13% lower than a year ago.
Excluding tax refunds from both periods, core net profit fell 7% to S$396 million. The decline was largely due to increased allowances which offset growth in operating profit driven by strong net interest income.
Net allowances for the quarter amounted to S$156 million, substantially higher than the S$39 million in 3Q07. The allowances were mainly for the Group’s holdings of debt securities which suffered losses following the unprecedented upheavals in global credit markets. Core operating businesses delivered steady results, as reflected in the 5% year-on-year increase in operating profit before allowances. Net interest income grew 21%, underpinned by healthy loan growth and better interest margins. Non interest income held up well under challenging market conditions, registering a modest decline of 4%, as weaker stockbroking, wealth management and investment income were largely compensated by stronger contributions from the insurance business and other fee-based activities.
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Sell: Target Price S$4.80 – Challenging Quarters Ahead
Revised target set at 1x P/B: In line with our strategy view that Singapore's STI may head to 1500, we reset our OCBC target to S$4.80 (from S$6.00). The 3Q08 result saw higher-than-expected provisions and although managementnoted these were on one-off debt securities defaults, management expectscoming quarters to be challenging. We have trimmed our forecasts further on higher provisions, weaker non-interest income and lower margins.
2008E/10E forecasts cut another 3-5%: We trimmed earnings post the 3Q08 result, now assuming provisions rise to 59bps of loans, margin contraction of 14bps from the cycle peak, and lower non-interest income due to weaker markets related income. Our 2009/10E forecasts lie about 12-14% below Bloomberg mean consensus estimates. Past downturns suggest that bank consensus earnings can fall 30-40% from peak in a recession. We have not cutour DPS forecast — we view that the bank could elect to maintain DPS levels to signal that capital position (tier-1 ratio 14.4%) remains strong.
3Q08 CEO views: There are some difficult quarters ahead, and this may be a more protracted downturn. But OCBC goes into this with a strong balance sheet and capital position, and management views it as unlikely that NPLs would return to the 8-9% level of the Asian Crisis. On Marina Bay Sands managementreiterated that the project is ring-fenced from the finances of the parent investor, and that the loan-to-value ratio of the development is low. The key concern is whether the parent investor can commit additional equity into the project as the loan is drawn down, but in that event another equity investor could be sought.
( 802 : another equity investor ??...must be the invisible hand )
iam802 wrote:resisted twice.
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