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DBS Group Holdings: Any price weakness is an opportunity to accumulate this bank

Goola Warden
Goola Warden • 3 min read
DBS Group Holdings: Any price weakness is an opportunity to accumulate this bank
 SINGAPORE (Jan 20): DBS Group Holdings is likely to face an increasing number of challenges this year, but none of them should involve the new digital banks. Glob­ally low interest rates may pressure the net interest margins of banks in general and
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SINGAPORE (Jan 17): DBS Group Holdings is likely to face an increasing number of challenges this year, but none of them should involve the new digital banks. Glob­ally low interest rates may pressure the net interest margins of banks in general and a full trade deal between the US and Chi­na is far from a certainty. Whatever the case, supply chains have been upended, and Asean could be a beneficiary.

Meanwhile, the unrest in Hong Kong could still pose problems for DBS even though the bank has weathered the storm so far, says CLSA. For the first nine months of FY2019, DBS Hong Kong’s net profit rose 5.4% y-o-y, while DBS group’s net profit rose 13.3% y-o-y. DBS views Hong Kong as a conduit to China’s Greater Bay Area. At any rate, Hong Kong has a knack of bouncing back.

Mainly, though, perennially low interest rates could pressure net interest margins for DBS and global banks in general. Still DBS remains in a plum position despite low inter­est rates because its funding cost is the low­est among the banks.

“DBS has the strongest deposit franchise among the three local banks. Its CASA (cur­rent account savings account) ratio as of Sept 30, 2019, is 57.8%, higher than 47.1% for Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and 43.8% for United Overseas Bank. DBS has an over­whelming competitive advantage with CASA ratio at 86.7% for Singapore dollar-denomi­nated deposits (market share of 53% for Sin­gapore dollar denominated savings accounts). Its cost of deposits was the lowest in the sec­tor at 1.03% in 3QFY2019, compared to OCBC at 1.64% and UOB at 1.65%,” notes Jonathan Koh, an analyst at UOB Kay Hian.

Wealth management continues to be a sweet spot for DBS. As at Sept 30, 2019, DBS’s wealth management AUM stood at $241 bil­lion, up 9% y-o-y. DBS CEO Piyush Gupta said during the bank’s third quarter results brief­ing that it continued to attract money in the ultra-high net worth and mid-tier segments, with net new money from across the region.

Indonesia could be another bright spot for DBS. On Jan 9, DBS hosted General (Ret.) Lu­hut Binsar Pandjaitan, Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs & Investment of Indone­sia. During a media briefing with the Minister, Gupta articulated that DBS had significantly scaled up in Indonesia following the acqui­sition of Australia and New Zealand Bank’s retail and wealth business, completed in Feb 2018. The transaction enhanced the bank’s af­fluent base, and gave it a sizeable credit card and unsecured lending franchise.

Last year, DBS launched digibank in a third market, Hong Kong, having launched digib­ank in Indonesia in 2017, and India in 2016.

“With Indonesia’s large digitally-savvy young population, digibank, our mobile-on­ly bank, is doing well. Since launch in Au­gust 2017, we have acquired about 600,000 customers, and continue to enhance the of­fering. As an example, we launched a digital lending product last year, which has been well received,” Gupta said.

One area that could be a source of loan growth is infrastructure financing in Indonesia where project financing would be needed for the move of the capital from Jakarta to Bor­neo. ”We’ve finalised research on [moving the capital to Borneo]. Construction begins end of this year and we can move the capital by end 2023 or early 2024,” General Pandjaitan said. “Moving the capital requires huge infra­structure spend and financing has to be [with] public private partnerships.”

Koh of UOB Kay Hian suggests accumulat­ing DBS at $21.80 to $24 as he believes DBS could raise dividends from $1.20 per share to $1.32 per share in a “best-case” scenario, giv­ing a yield of 5.5%.

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