Showing posts with label Dubai Crises. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dubai Crises. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Indian Banks' Exposure To Dubai
November 30 2009, 11:46:
MAHRUKH ADAJANIA & SREEKANTH AKULA, NOMURA ASIA RESEARCH
This note highlights the exposure of India banks to Dubai.
Bank of Baroda's exposure to Dubai accounts for 2% of its
total assets and 7% of its international assets.
For all other large banks exposure is not significant.
Summary
Except for Bank of Baroda,
no bank has provided quantitative details of its Dubai exposures.
Among non-banks, Kotak Mahindra Bank has insurance policies
generated from Dubai, runs an offshore mutual fund and has
other investments and broking revenuescoming out of Dubai.
ICICI Bank
ICICI Bank management provided the following details
• Loans for the UAE region are booked at the Bahrain branch.
The Bahrain balance sheet is US$6bn. Separate Dubai exposure is
not available.
• Non-India corporate exposure in Dubai is not material.
• India exposure to Dubai is with recourse to the parent’s balance sheet.
• The bank does not see any material impact from the current environment.
Valuation Methodology:
We value ICICI Bank's core business at 1.7x P/BV FY11F.
We have valued life insurance at 20x one-year forward
new business profit, asset management at 7% of equity
funds and 2% of debt funds, ICICI Ventures at 18x one-year
forward earnings, general insurance at 10x one-year
forward P/E, ICICI Securities at 18x one-year forward P/E
and I-Sec PD at 5x one-year forward P/E. We have applied
a 15% subsidiary discount to arrive at our final
consolidated subsidiary value.
Risks Which May Impede the Achievement of the Price Target:
Upside risks to our estimates from faster-than-expected growth:
we build in 5% loan growth for FY10F and 15% for FY11F.
We believe the bank could review its strategy of slow growth
in certain segments, especially mortgages if there are
favourable policy changes, such as tax sops in the budget.
Downside risks to our earnings estimates: slower-than-expected
economic growth, a rapid rise in bond yields owing to rising
fiscal deficit and increasing global stress that will hurt ICICI's
international book, are key downside risks to our estimates.
State Bank of India
SBI only has a representative office in Dubai.
The bank was granted a full-fledged banking license
at end-September 2009. It is trying to build out
business and has no significant exposure to Dubai yet.
Valuation Methodology:
We value SBI using a sum-of-the-parts (SOTP) valuation,
valuing the banking and non-banking businesses separately.
Our 12-month price target of INR2,590 for SBI comprises
INR2,356 for the banking business and INR231 for subsidiaries.
Our price target for the core bank is derived using a target
RoE of 17.1% and CoE of 12.0% arriving at a multiple
of 1.8x P/BV. Our fair value of INR231 for the subsidiaries
comprises insurance and asset management business.
We have valued life insurance at 18x oneyear
forward NBAP (New business acheived profit).
We have valued SBI's asset management business
at 3% of debt funds and 7% of equity funds.
Risks Which May Impede the Achievement of the Price Target:
A faster than expected rise in rates or slower than expected
loan growth are key risks to our ratings and price targets
for Indian banks.
Bank of Baroda
• BoB's total exposure to Dubai is US$833mn or
INR40bn, which is 7% of total international
assets and 2% of total assets as of September 2009.
Total exposure to UAE is INR100bn or US$2bn.
The numbers provided by management are lower
than street estimates.
• BoB's exposure to Dubai World is US$200mn and
the first repayment is due only in 2011 and the
next one in 2013.
• Over and above Dubai World, BoB has an exposure
of US$120mn to other Gulf properties. We estimate
that at least 60% of this would be to Dubai.
• BoB does not have exposure to Nakheel.
• The exposure to both Dubai and UAE is diversified
between local and trade finance exposure but no
proportion has been made available.
• The gross NPLs on the total Dubai balance sheet
are low at 0.3% and net NPLs are zero.
• All property exposures in Dubai are standard
accounts as of now.
• BoB stopped lending to Dubai real
estate 1.5 years ago.
• BoB has said that it will revert on the size
of the Dubai balance sheet.
• Other than Dubai, BoB has exposure to other Emirates
nations, including the Abu Dhabi government.
• UAE operations account for 12% of BoB's earnings but
the proportion of earnings from Dubai is not known.
HDFC
• HDFC has a representative office in Dubai
to finance India property. HDFC does not have Dubai exposure.
Valuation Methodology:
We value the core business at INR1,264 and
subsidiaries at INR702, which gives us our
consolidated fair value of INR1,970.
We have valued the core business on a sustainable
RoE of 22.9% and CoE of 11.4%, which yields a P/BV multiple
of 3.2x. We have valued life insurance at 18x FY11E NBAP.
We have valued HDFC’s stake in its asset management company
at 7% of equity funds and 2% of debt funds.
Risks Which May Impede the Achievement of the Price Target:
(1) Subsidiary valuations have moved up sharply in the
recent past, driven by strong business performance.
In our valuations, HDFC's subsidiaries account for
more than 30% of the fair value. Hence, stronger-than-expected
performance by the subsidiaries could provide upside to our
valuation. The two largest subsidiaries are the life
insurance business and HDFC Bank. We estimate taht a
life insurance premium CAGR of 58% over FY07-FY10,
compared with our current assumption of a 48% CAGR,
would add INR50, or 2%, to fair value.
(2) Continued strong performance in a period of
prolonged sector weakness would warrant a premium,
in our view. (3) The current strong performance
has likely been driven by HDFC's ability to deliver
in a severely weak mortgage market in the past
two quarters. If the housing market were to witness
prolonged weakness in the
next quarters as HDFC sustained its growth rates,
we believe the market would likely ascribe a premium
to the franchise value of HDFC, which is a potential
upside risk too.
Axis Bank
• The Dubai balance sheet is 1.3% of Axis
Bank’s total balance sheet.
Other banks operating out of South India,
such as Federal Bank and South Indian Bank,
could be sourcing a lot of their deposits from
Dubai.
Valuation Methodology:
We value Axis Bank at 2.5x P/BV FY11 (sustainable
RoE of 19.4% and growth rate of 7%).
Risks Which May Impede the Achievement of the Price Target:
A faster-than-expected rise in interest rates and higher
delinquencies are key risks to our rating and price
target for Axis Bank.
KPMG TO REPRESENT BANKS WHO LENT MONEY TO DUBAI WORLD
DEC 1, 2009
Banks who lent money to Dubai World, the debt-laden
state investment group, reportedly plan to appoint
auditors KPMG to represent them in talks over recovering
their money.
British newspaper The Independent reported that
the banks include HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland,
Lloyds Banking Group, and Standard Chartered.
The banks’ total loans to Dubai World
exceeds US$ 30 billion.
It added that KPMG will be formally appointed
once the creditor banks have created a steering
committee comprising five or six of the main
lenders to lead the negotiations.
KPMG was not immediately available to comment.
Dubai said last week that it would delay payment on
debt issued by Dubai World and property developer
Nakheel, igniting fears over sovereign debt
defaults and sending global markets sharply lower.
Dubai World and Nakheel have oustanding debt of US$ 59 billion.
Source:The Independent
Banks who lent money to Dubai World, the debt-laden
state investment group, reportedly plan to appoint
auditors KPMG to represent them in talks over recovering
their money.
British newspaper The Independent reported that
the banks include HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland,
Lloyds Banking Group, and Standard Chartered.
The banks’ total loans to Dubai World
exceeds US$ 30 billion.
It added that KPMG will be formally appointed
once the creditor banks have created a steering
committee comprising five or six of the main
lenders to lead the negotiations.
KPMG was not immediately available to comment.
Dubai said last week that it would delay payment on
debt issued by Dubai World and property developer
Nakheel, igniting fears over sovereign debt
defaults and sending global markets sharply lower.
Dubai World and Nakheel have oustanding debt of US$ 59 billion.
Source:The Independent
Sunday, November 29, 2009
UAE banks risk credibility loss on Dubai exposures
DUBAI: The credibility of the United Arab Emirates finance sector will suffer unless the authorities and lenders move quickly to assuage fears
that Dubai's debt trouble are spiraling out of control, analysts and bankers say.
Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, said on Wednesday it planned to restructure one of its holding companies, a shock announcement that triggered global concerns about the emirate's ability to meet its debt obligations.
International banks' exposure related to Dubai World amounts to $12 billion in syndicated and bilateral loans, banking sources said.
"I would say it is a huge shock for the UAE banking sector, and until we have some clarity the current situation will continue to cause damage," said Raj Madha, banking analyst at EFG Hermes.
Regional banks such as Emirates NBD and Mashreq Bank, which play a pivotal role in funding the UAE economy, have not made public statements yet on their exposure.
Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, said on Wednesday it planned to restructure one of its holding companies, a shock announcement that triggered global concerns about the emirate's ability to meet its debt obligations.
International banks' exposure related to Dubai World amounts to $12 billion in syndicated and bilateral loans, banking sources said.
"I would say it is a huge shock for the UAE banking sector, and until we have some clarity the current situation will continue to cause damage," said Raj Madha, banking analyst at EFG Hermes.
Regional banks such as Emirates NBD and Mashreq Bank, which play a pivotal role in funding the UAE economy, have not made public statements yet on their exposure.
"Dubai World and its entities account for a very large chunk of the Dubai economy and its indebtedness and we expect Emirates NBD to have a full share of that," Madha said.
Officials at the Dubai-based bank could not be reached for comment.
UAE banks are exacerbating the situation by remaining silent on their exposures, said another banking analyst at a large international bank, who requested not be named.
"Unless there is clarity from banks, people will just make up numbers, which is worse," he said. "On the whole, the reputation has been damaged."
TRANSPARENCY Officials at the Dubai-based bank could not be reached for comment.
UAE banks are exacerbating the situation by remaining silent on their exposures, said another banking analyst at a large international bank, who requested not be named.
"Unless there is clarity from banks, people will just make up numbers, which is worse," he said. "On the whole, the reputation has been damaged."
The region's financial services sector has already drawn criticism for its lack of disclosure and transparency but some analysts expect the Dubai debt crisis to spark a change.
"The way in which the UAE authorities handle the problem will clearly be important for investor confidence, as it will set a precedent for Dubai," Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note.
"Taking into view the huge reputational risks involved and also the amount of leverage that currently exists in the emirate we believe that the UAE authorities will be more likely to try and secure an orderly restructuring of outstanding liabilities of the two firms," the Goldman analysts said.
As a result of Dubai's debt struggle, banks will continue to face difficulties in the coming quarters.
"We expect asset quality to continue to deteriorate in the coming quarters and this trend could be exacerbated by the direct and indirect impact of a debt restructuring by Dubai World, which represents a major pillar of the Dubai economy," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Mohamed Damak.
The UAE banks, however, will continue to be supported by the authorities, analysts said.
"I very much doubt that banks will be expected to bear the full burden of their exposure. I think at some level the assets would be or should be bought out by the federal government," EFG's Madha said.
Ratings agency Moody's also said it had no reason to believe that the federal government would abstain from supporting banks in Dubai or in other emirates.
Source: REUTERS
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)