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Initial View: Access Bank Plc FY 17 - No Room to Swing a Cat

  • Access Bank Plc (Access) released its audited FY 17 result yesterday with earnings running a tad behind our estimates on account of higher impairment and FX revaluation losses. Precisely, EPS declined by 13% YoY to N14 (2017E: N2.53). Nonetheless, the bank declared a final dividend of N0.40 which brings total FY 17 pay-out to N0.65 (same as 2016) and translates to dividend yield of 3%.
  • The result resonates with our earlier report at the start of 2017 (Access Bank: Can lightning strike thrice?) wherein we highlighted the boost in 2016 earnings that stemmed from gains from the disposal of its 17% stake in Stanbic Pensions and thus noted that with no assets to sell and with less fuel from currency depreciation for its derivative tank, at least relative to prior years, we expected Access to face an uphill struggle to replicate earnings momentum to boost ROAE. In sync with this view, though the bank booked N120 billion in FX trading income with a sizable chunk stemming from realized gains on derivatives that matured during the year, non-interest revenue (NIR) was marginally flat at N139 billion (2016: N133 billion) on the back of N12 billion FX revaluation loss and a flattish fee income (+2.2% YoY to N57 billion). Given the preceding, Net Interest Margin (NIMs) pressure became more evident, with declining yield on assets at 12.0% (9M 2017: 13.5%) putting pressure on NIMs growth (+38bps YoY to 6.1%). Further down, Access booked N5 billion in impairment with specific provisioning constituting 95% of impairment. Cost of risk and NPL ratio printed at 4.2% and 4.8% respectively (2016: 1.2% and 2.1% accordingly).
  • Sharp decline in asset yields drives NIMs lower. In the fourth quarter, asset yield moderated to 260bps QoQ to 7.8%. Surprisingly, much of the moderation stemmed from asset yields on loans. Consequently, despite a 257bps moderation in funding cost, the lower asset yields led to a 37bps QoQ moderation in NIMs to 5.4%. In terms of funding cost, Access reported a faster decline in interest expense (-30% QoQ) relative to interest income (-12% QoQ), largely from a 60% QoQ drop in interest expense on deposits, reflecting a 18% QoQ jump in CASA deposit. However, CASA as a share of total deposit remained flat at 43%.
  • 9-mobile exposure drives asset quality deterioration. In line with peers that have released thus far, higher provisioning in Q4 has been a key theme. In our view, a sizable chunk of this stemmed from exposure to 9mobile which banks have had to take a hair-cut based on the disparity between the carrying value and market value. Consequently, Access booked N3 billion in impairment over Q4 (9mobile exposure: N40 billion) with cost of risk expanding to 4.2% in the period (Q3 17: 0.5%).
  • Derivative Income line starts to cool off. Over Q4 17, NIR declined by 41% QoQ to N4 billion. Much of the deceleration reflected a 39% QoQ in trading income and a N12 billion FX revaluation losses. On the trading income leg, the decline stemmed from FX trading income (largely realized gains on derivatives) which moderated sizably to N3.8 billion in the quarter (Q3 17: N56.6 billion) while FX revaluation losses possibly reflects translation of FCY position from N305/$ to N330/$, which from our estimate, the bank has a net-short FCY position of $450 million. To our minds, we expect to see a sustained decline in the derivative line over 2018 as situations now seems unappealing for such swap positions. Overall, the troika of lower NIMs and NIR, alongside sharp increase in provisioning drove Q4 EPS lower by 67% QoQ to N0.19 – the lowest in 24 quarters (Q4 17E: N0.59).
  • The Bank will be holding a conference call on Monday, 26th March at 2pm Lagos time (1pm London/3pm Johannesburg/9am New York).
  • Access is trading at a P/B of 0.65x which is at a discount to peers of 1.7x - ROE of 12%. Our last communicated FVE on Access is N70 which translates to a NEUTRAL rating on the stock. We will revisit our numbers after further analysis and discussion with management.
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ARM Securities Limited
ARM Securities Limited

ARM Securities Limited is a full-service brokerage house that offers best-in-class brokerage services to local as well as foreign private and institutional investors. Formerly known as Hamilton Hammer, the Company commenced operation in 1994 and was acquired by ARM Investment Managers in 2008--an acquisition which has successfully re-positioned the company as a recognized brokerage firm in Nigeria. The Company is a dealing member of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) and is regulated by Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). ARM Securities research team provides insightful commentaries on the Nigerian economy and its equity and debt markets using an approach which incorporates a thorough understanding of the fundamentals of the industries and companies under coverage. The research therefore adopts an integrated methodology of top-down analysis and bottom-up stock selection, which focuses on publicly quoted companies on the Nigerian Stock Exchange that are judged to offer the highest potential for earnings growth. In addition, its analysts provide periodic commentaries on a range of topical global and local issues which provide investing clients with a holistic view of the opportunities and risks in today’s financial market landscape. ​

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