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Post Info TOPIC: Singapore Banks


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RE: Singapore Banks


SINGAPORE, Aug 24 (Reuters) - DBS Group Holdings , Southeast
Asia's biggest bank, said on Friday that it has more direct exposure to
collateralised debt obligations than previously declared, but that it is
comfortable with the holding.

"We are comfortable with our exposure to the conduit," a DBS
spokeswoman said.

Broker CLSA said in a report that while Singapore banks have limited
exposure to collateralised debt obligations, DBS may have S$2.4 billion
($1.6 billion) worth of CDO holdings -- nearly double the S$1.3 billion
direct exposure it initially declared.

It said that DBS may have more direct exposure to the CDO market
through a special purpose vehicle that had commercial paper backed by S$1.1
billion worth of CDOs, with the paper due for renewal..si>

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Extracted from From UOBKayHian Report 5Aug2007

Exposure to CDOs is small
CDO = Collateralised Loan Obligation / Collateralised Debt Obligation

DBS'  CDO portfolio is around US$850m, of which 22% are in Asset Backed Securities (ABS) CDOs.
DBS' exposure to ABS CDOs is therefore US$187m (S$284m), or 1.4% of shareholders' funds, or

12% of our FY07 net profit forecast.


OCBC's CDO exposure is S$600m, which represents 4.2% of shareholders'

funds or 31% of our FY07 net profit forecast.
[TC : Does that mean forcasted $0,50 EPS will become $0.345 in worse case situation?]


UOB's ABS CDO exposure is less than S$100m, which is less than 0.6% of

shareholders' funds.



The recent share price weakness makes OCBC even more attractive.

Bank of Ningbo closing price of Rmb31.45 on 3Aug 07
Bought 10% stake for S$120m in 2006
OCBCs 10% stake = S$1.57b
Unrealised gain=S$1.45b 

OCBCs CDO exposure = max $600m 
Gain from NingBo can cover losses in CDO.
Good buying opportunity?
Our S$10.80 target price is pegged to 2.8x multiple over FY07 RNTA (excluding revaluation

surpluses from Great Eastern Holdings), which is not excessive as OCBC traded

at 2.6x P/B back in 1999/2000 when it has yet to go regional in a big way.



HLF is another attractive BUY.
More S44 tax credits to give back to shareholders 
Forecast 23¢

FY07 dividend per share gives a yield of 5.8%.
[TC : No Details as to how much exposure HLF has on CDOs]
[TC : Analyst quite bullish on HLF and sets a target of $5]



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Singapore banks seen posting solid Q2 profits

Singapore's big three banks will soon be turning in their earnings reports for the second quarter. Analysts say they expect the trio to announce solid profits - thanks to a rise in their stockbroking businesses and one-time gains from asset sales. DBS, UOB and OCBC together racked up profits totalling some S$1.3 billion during the first quarter. And analysts believe, the April to June period was just as busy for the nation's three domestic banks because, despite weak loans growth during that period, trading volume in the stock market shot up.

Leng Seng Choon, Banking Analyst, UOB-Kay Hian, said: "Overall, we believe the net interest margins will be relatively flat. In second quarter, we saw stock market turnover growing by 76 percent year-on-year. So that is a very positive factor and will translate into stronger broking income for the banks. In second quarter, Singapore GDP was like up 7 over percent year-on-year. So in that sense I think that will mean asset quality of the banks will continue to be good and this will also mean that provisions will be relatively low."

Property sales at OCBC and UOB are also expected to bolster their Q2 earnings. Both banks sold non-core assets to comply with a July deadline set by the central bank.

Roger Tan, Investment Analyst, SIAS Research, said: "For the second quarter, year-on-year, we are expecting an improvement of about 20 to 22 percent. In the first quarter of 2006 alone, year-on-year, we've already seen banks improve their bottomlines by about 17 percent. So putting the first quarter and the second quarter together, we should see an improvement in the bottomline on average of the banks of about 20 percent year-on-year."

And despite high oil prices and the risk of a hard landing in the US economy, market watchers are sanguine about the second-half prospects for the Singapore banks. They foresee greater demand for loans ahead as upcoming mega projects kick in and require financing.

Leng Seng Choon said: "One area that investors are looking at is the potential loans growth. We are aware that the integrated resorts as well as Orchard Turn projects and we estimate that these could lead to loans increasing by some S$10 billion over the next 2 to 3 years. That amounts to something like 5 percent of the total loans book of Singapore."

Total outstanding loans in the Singapore banking system is currently about S$190 billion. - CNA/ch



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DBS 1Q06 Report from dbs website http://www.dbs.com/newsroom/2006/press060428.html


 


DBS First-Quarter earnings rise 39% to $518 Million

* * *


Broad-based improvement in interest and non-interest income
underpins stronger performance



SINGAPORE, 28 April 2006 – DBS Group Holdings announced today that net profit for the first quarter to March 31, 2006 rose 39% year on year to $518 million. Total operating income grew 22% as interest and fee income continued to expand while trading income recovered after several quarters of subdued market activity.


The increase in total operating income compared to a year ago resulted from a combination of healthier interest margins, higher business volumes and a better trading environment as market conditions improved.


Compared to fourth quarter 2005, net profit was 35% higher while total operating income grew 14% if one-time gains and goodwill charges booked during the previous quarter were excluded. First quarter loan volumes, however, dipped slightly from December 2005 after 12 consecutive quarters of growth due to declines in housing loans in Singapore and Hong Kong as DBS exercised discipline amid intense mortgage competitive pricing pressures.


Interest income and margins at quarterly record


Net interest income climbed 24% from a year ago and 6% from the previous quarter to a record $850 million.


Interest margins rose from 1.82% a year ago and 2.06% in the previous quarter to a record 2.23%. In Singapore, loan yields, including housing loan yields, continued to increase across the board while the increase in funding costs was slower. In Hong Kong, the spread between prime lending rates and funding costs reached their highest level in five quarters.


Customer loans rose 11% from a year ago to $78.8 billion from lending to corporates and SMEs across the region. Compared to December 2005, customer loans fell 1% as housing loans declined 2%. Higher interest rates encouraged residential mortgage borrowers in Singapore to repay portions of their loans ahead of schedule with lower-yielding Central Provident Fund savings, while the housing loan market remained competitive in Hong Kong. By geographical region, a fall in customer loans booked in Singapore and Hong Kong was partially offset by higher volumes from the rest of the region.


The overall loan-deposit ratio stood at 66%, up from 61% a year ago but lower than the 68% in December 2005 as deposits continue to grow.


Non-interest income up 19% as both fee and trading incomes grow


Non-interest income amounted to $420 million, up 19% from a year ago and 34% from the previous quarter.


Fee income rose 14% from a year ago and 9% from the previous quarter to $262 million. The strongest growth was from fund management and stockbroking as a result of buoyant equity markets, while fees from trade and remittances, credit cards and wealth management also increased.
Sales of unit trusts, bancassurance and structured deposits were 7% below a year ago but rose 32% from the previous quarter to $1.92 billion. Unit trust sales were boosted by improved investor sentiment.


Net trading income from trading businesses amounted to $113 million, compared to $73 million a year ago and $5 million in the previous quarter. There were increased trading opportunities in foreign exchange and interest rate instruments, as well as higher demand from corporate and SME clients to hedge their foreign exchange risks against more volatile currency markets.


Cost-income ratio improves to 44%


Operating expenses grew 16% from a year ago and 2% from the previous quarter to $564 million. Staff costs increased 13% from a year ago on a 9% rise in headcount to 12,673. Compared to the previous quarter, headcount fell slightly while staff costs grew 8% as a result of higher bonuses and salaries amid a tight labour market. Non-staff costs were 19% higher than a year ago as technology and general expenses rose, but they were slightly below the previous quarter’s.


With total operating income rising faster than operating expenses, the cost-income ratio improved to 44% from 47% a year ago and 49% in the previous quarter.


Asset quality remains strong

The non-performing loan rate of 2.1% was unchanged from the previous quarter and below the 2.4% a year ago. Total non-performing assets, including debt securities and contingent liabilities, fell to $1.75 billion, 9% below a year ago and 6% below the previous quarter.


Specific provision charges set aside for loans amounted to $40 million or 20 basis points of average loans, compared to the 25 basis points a year ago and the 35 basis points in the previous quarter. Provision charges for new NPLs were lower during the quarter than in the two comparative periods and more than offset a decline in provision write-backs for loan recoveries. A general provision charge of $14 million was also taken during the quarter as a result of higher off balance sheet liabilities.


Total cumulative provision coverage reached 100%, the highest in DBS’ history, compared to 97% in December 2005 and 90% a year ago.


The total capital adequacy ratio stood at 14.1% with the tier-1 ratio at 10.2%, both comfortably above minimum regulatory requirements.


DBS Vice-Chairman and CEO Jackson Tai said, “Our better top-line revenues and bottom-line profit reflect margin expansion as well as our work over many quarters to re-shape our asset mix and grow our loan book. We are encouraged by the sustained growth in net interest margins and income, and the double digit increase in fee and trading income. We will build on this momentum as we continue to grow our customer franchise across the region.”


The Board of Directors declared an ordinary dividend of 17 cents per share for the quarter, unchanged from the previous quarter but 55% above the 11 cents per share paid a year ago.


----------------------
Comments:


Good enconomy boosted trade activities, interest margins also rise to 2.23%. Also encouraging is the increased contribution from HK and China.


Eagerly awaiting UOB results. Over the years, UOB always posts higher interest margins. Results from its Thai subsidiary will be interesting! Expecting some divestment distribution, although in my opinion, the market has oready priced in that value.


 



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UOB - CIMB


Extracts fm CIMB Report dated 13-Mar-06,

Precusor to OUE divestment UOL gets exposure to promising OUH

OUE transfers two properties to JVCo. Two of UOB’s associated companies announced a related party transaction. 57%-owned OUE (OUE SP, S$11.50, NR) will transfer OverseasUnion House (OUH) and Change Alley Aerial Plaza (CAAP) to Clifford Development (JVCo), a wholly-owned subsidiary of OUE. The JVCo will pay a consideration of S$73m, based on an average of the valuations conducted by two independent valuers. 90% of the consideration is to be satisfied by shares by the JVCo to OUE, with S$7.3m remaining as an outstanding loan as a shareholders’ loan.

UOL gets exposure to redevelopment potential of OUH. UOL (UOL SP, S$2.63, Outperform) will subscribe for 32.85m shares in theJVCo, paying S$32.86m in cash. UOL will also grant a shareholders’ loan of S$3.65m. Upon completion of the deal, UOL and OUE will end up having 33.3% and 66.7% equity stake in the JVCo. Transaction effectively reduces OUE’s direct exposure to OUH. More importantly, UOL have the option to increase its equity stake in the JVCo to 50% within the next 12 months.

Comments

First OUE’s UOB-stake reduced, now exposure to OUH reduced. We see this latest transaction as another precursor to the divestment of OUE. UOBowns 56.98% of OUE and needs to bring this stake down to 10% by 19 July 2006. OUE holds little sentimental value for the Wee family, as it was brought into UOB Group when OUB was acquired. Hence, UOB is more likely to cede control of OUE to an outsider if needed. However, before that is done, there are pieces of strategic assets within OUE that needs to be addressed first. This is already work-in-progress. In 2006, OUE had reduced its 3.1%-stake in UOB down to 1.45%. This latest transaction looks to be shifting some of the redevelopment potential of OUH to UOL. OUH is valuable because of its redevelopment potential, given its proximity to the Marina Integrated Resorts.

Wee’s family ownership stronger via UOL.We believe that the latest transaction is done because the Wee’s family ownership is stronger at UOL. Currently, the Wee family owns 26.8% of UOL but has no direct stake in OUE. With the latest stake, the Wee family can still benefit from any redevelopment potential of UOL, even after OUE is divested.

After the remaining 1.45%-UOB stake is sold, OUE will essentially just be a hotel stock. At the market current price, the 1.45% stake in UOB is worth S$342m, easily absorbed by UOB’s ongoing share buyback programme. With the latest proposed transaction and after selling the remaining 1.45%-UOB stake eventually, the prime asset in OUE would be the Mandarin group of hotels. At that stage, our base case scenario is for UOB to distribute its stake in OUE in-specie, back to shareholders. That would amount to another 64cts/UOB share of special dividend for UOB shareholders (4.2% special dividend). While that is an easy way to conclude the OUE divestment, we believe that there are other transactions that could be even more value-accretive for UOB. This would include trying to find a hotel buyer that would be willing to pay a control premium for a 47%-stake in OUE.



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DBS - CIMB


Extracts fm CIMB Report dated 14-Mar-06,

More than a bite-sized Kim Chi Confirms bid for Korea Exchange Bank

DBS confirms bid for Korea Exchange Bank (KEB). DBS has submitted a bid to acquire a majority stake in Korea Exchange Bank (004940 KS, Krw13,100, NR). KEB is the 5th largest bank in Korea, with a strong franchise in trade finance and foreign exchange. By assets, KEB’s US$64.4bn look sizable relative to DBS’s asset base of US$110.6bn. DBS currently has only a single branch in Korea and it has no overlapping operations with KEB. Hence, this is like untested ground for DBS.

What’s up on the table? The major shareholders of KEB include a US buyout company, Lone Star (50.5%), Commerz (6.5%), Korea Eximbank (13.9%) and Bank of Korea (6.1%). The Korea Times report that Lone Star is under investigation for tax evasion and questionable dealings when it purchased KEB in 2003. We understand that this is the main stake up for sale and this is also the stake the DBS has bidded for. We also understand that there are "tag along" rights by Commerz (6.5%) and Korea Eximbank (7.6% out of 13.9%) in the event that Lone Star sells out its stake. Thus, although a bidder bids for the 50.5% stake, what is eventually in the bag could be a significant 64.6% stake. KEB is valuable because it is one of the last sizable banking assets up for sale in Korea. This is the Bank Permata equivalent in Indonesia.

Solo bid, possibly competing against two Korea banks and other foreign banks.According to earlier press reports, the lineup for this stake includes two local Korea banks (Kookmin and Hana) and three foreign banks (DBS, Deutsche and HSBC). Because of the size of the stake, the foreign banks were previously expected to pair up with the local banks to make the bid. DBS was initially rumoured to partnerHana. This is now not true. DBS has confirmed that it is making a solo bid for Lone Star’s 50.5% stake.

No details on valuation disclosed, but market saying 5-6 trillion won for Lone Star’s stake. KEB’s market cap stands at Krw8.4tr. Although DBS has not disclosed valuation details regarding its bid, market rumors peg a price tag of Krw5-6tr for Lone Star’s stake, implying a 17-41% premium to last traded market price of KEB. KEB currently trades at 1.5x P/BV (FY05), implying market bids put valuations somewhere in between 1.7x-2.1x P/BV. According to IBES estimates, KEB’s FY06 ROE is about 13.5%. If market rumors on pricing turn out to be true, this would suggest that valuations are fair for an attractive asset. This is certainly not "Dao Heng" re-enacted. DBS currently trades at 1.5x P/BV with forecast ROE of 12.2%.

ASEAN, India and China remains priority. We asked DBS why a somewhat unexpected bid was undertaken. DBS maintains that there is no change to its acquisition policy. ASEAN remains the key region for its expansion trail, then India and China. We get the sense that this was an opportunitistic bid, given that valuations are not demanding. If successful, it also offers DBS a viable platform into Korea. Korea is a matured market with loan growth between 8-9%. Korea is only growing somewhat faster than the low-single digit rates of Singapore and Hong Kong. Because Korea is a developed market, we believe that Korea was also never on the cards previously as DBS could never have made it in on their own. This stake out in the market now, changes the equation a little. Comments

Sizable acquisition, if DBS gets it. This is a sizable acsuition, if DBS wins the bid.According to IBES estimates, KEB’s FY06 Krw806bn net profit (S$1.34bn) is two-thirds that of DBS Group, meaning that Korea’s contribution would be second to Singapore, should the bid succeed. Also, Korea would leapfrog Hong Kong to become DBS’s biggest market outside Signapore. By current market cap, KEB is also more than half the size of DBS. While earnings contribution is significant, the other side of the coin in a chunky acquisition is funding. DBS Tier-1 capital stands at 10.6%, implying excess capital of only about S$2bn. With the stake rumoured at Krw 5-6tr (S$9-10bn), DBS would need to issue equity or pay with shares, if the bid goes through.

No need to get overly worried that DBS will overpay. We sense that the opportunistic element and the value element to this bid. We believe that DBS has learnt the lesson from Dao Heng (especially withthe goodwill issue arising yet again recently) and would certainly undertake greater care in opening up the chequebook this time round. A quick check on Kookmin and Hana suggests that the Korea banks would need financing as well, if they were to undertake the acquisition themselves. This allays some of the fears of aggressive bidding by the Korea banks. We suspect that the highest bids could come from the other foreign bidders, HSBC and Deutsche. Taken against this backdrop, we think that if DBS emerges as a winner, it would be slightly surprising.

Why Korea, when China and India beckons?We believe that the time is probably right for another major acquisition. Dao Heng was afterall five years ago, and well digested by now. Our only grouse is that Korea appears to be a strange choice when other attractive developing markets are probably a better fit for DBS. India is a double-digit growth market and it is also a market where DBS has spent considerable time and resources to understand in the past years. In China, opportunities abound when it eventually opens up. Closer to home, Indonesia and Malaysia would probably be two other markets that are more digestible while we wait for India and China to open up. DBS does not have much local knowledge in Korea and theacquisition could take up much of management’s time in the next few years when the big developing markets open up. Unless the price is attractive, we see no reason why DBS should be in a hurry to add Korea into its portfolio.

Valuation and Recommendation

Maintain Outperform. We note that this is more than a bite-sized kim chi that DBS is chewing. Logically, given the size of the acquisition (and the unfamiliarity), investors would have reasons to worry. However, taking into account other factors like regional opportunities and other competiting foreign bids, we see little risk that DBS would overpay, or emerge as a winner for KEB. We maintain our Outperform call on DBS and our target price of S$17.90. We see low possibility of changes from current status quo. A winning bid above 2.0x P/BV would be reason to be negative.



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OCBC - CIMB


Extracts fm CIMB Report dated 17-Mar-06,

Gains from Robinson sale smaller than property sales

OCBC rumored to sell Robinsons

Indonesia Lippo Group as buyer for Robinson? The press reported that OCBC is close to completing a deal to sell its stake in Robinsons (ROB SP, S$6.45, Neutral). Market rumors suggest a pricing as high as S$7.00 for Robinsons. The buyer is rumored to be the Lippo Group. The buyer is also rumored to have given an undertaking to operate Robinsons under the group’s established retail name. Lippo was one of the four bidders that recently took part in a recent closed tender for OCBC’s stake in Robinsons.

Comments

Makes sense for a foreign retailer to buy. The rumors probably have some truth as it makes sense for a foreign retailer to look at Robinsons. Lippo controls Indonesia’s largest retailer, Matahari. Matahari is involved in department stores and supermarkets in Indonesia. In the past three years, Matahari has also expanded into hypermarts and shopping malls. The acquisition of Robinson’s will give Matahari the platform into Singapore as well as build on its shopping malls strategy.

Shareholding structure of Robinsons. OCBC has a direct stake of 16.8% directly through the banking group, but owns another 14.0% owned through insurance subsidiary, Great Eastern’s (GE SP, S$14.20, Neutral). The stake that needs to be brought down to 10% (under the divestment rules) only applies to OCBC’s direct stake and not to GE’s stake. However, in our opinion, for the Robinsons stake to be sufficiently attractive enough for Lippo’s Matahari, OCBC’s cumulative stake would probably be sold. We estimate that OCBC could record divestment gains of between S$80-90m for its 16.8% stake. Robinson represents the last of OCBC’s equity stake that needs to be divested.

Gains not as significant as property divestments. The gains from Robinsons will not be as significant as the gains that OCBC will reap from ts non-core property assets sales. At the moment, a piece of prime residential land on Kim Seng Road is also out for sale. Using its last market valuation on 2004 Annual Report, gains would be at least S$142m, but on current property sentiments we expect gains to probably come in above S$200m. Onwards, there are other properties assets that still available for sale. One of the biggest components of its current property surpluses would be Specialist Shopping center. (>S$256m gains). We expect property sales to be a bigger replenishment of capital for OCBC.

Valuation and recommendation

Maintain Neutral. Our target price for OCBC is unchanged at S$7.20. Capital management news flow is always good for OCBC though we caution that the market is already expecting such news flow and Robinson’s sale is not as significant as the gains from other property sales that we expect over the year. We expect divestments to bring back capital for OCBC to sustain share buybacks and overseas investments. Our recent downgrade was premised on slowing operations in Singapore. We maintain out Neutral rating.



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RE: Singapore Banks


Just wanted to make a comment. I am still vested in banks, still thinking what to do next :D


Since financial crisis, MAS has been helping to restructure the banks and at the same time liberalising the market in phases.
This liberalisation will almost be complete come July when MAS will release the stranglehold on the atm networks. Early this week,  I read about Citibank going to apply for access to this. If they succeed, it means anyone can deposit $$ in Citibank withdraw $$ from any atm machine.If it happens, it will really eat into the deposits and the retail business of local banks will suffer.


The restructuring includes many things - mergers, getting rid of non core biz, expanding overseas. Overseas expansion has been somewhat successful but not sure if its enough. Not sure about OCBC but DBS and UOB now has some 30% of revenue coming from overseas. In the comms arena, Singtel has sucessfully completed this transition.


So later part of the year we may see some action in banks, maybe more mergers/aquisition? Maybe some banks will suffer? Competition will definately benefit the consumers.



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Singapore Banks - CIMB


Extracts fm CIMB Report dated 6-Mar-06,

More reasons to buy UOB; DBS a 2H story


  • Upgraded UOB to top pick; fee income strength plus divestment catalysts. Although UOB’s 4Q05 results came in only slightly above our expectations, we saw enough positives to upgrade our rating from Neutral to Outperform. UOB is now our pick of the sector. Operationally, its strong fee income trends and margin stabilisation have convinced us that the worst is over for the bank. Other reasons for our optimism include: 1) an alleviation of capital concerns; 2) the dissipation of share-overhang concerns; and 3) potential yield upside from the distribution of OUE in specie. 
  • OCBC had a decent quarter but the good news is in the price. The other bank that reported above-consensus results was OCBC. Unfortunately, the outperformance was largely driven by special dividends from Raffles Holdings and gains from the sale of investment securities. Operationally, Malaysia was strong but Singapore was fairly weak. With the strongest Tier-I ratio and the best exposure to Singapore’s rising property values, we believe that its divestment/re-investment angle is not over. That said, OCBC’s stock has performed well for quite a while, with valuations now fairly stretched. We downgraded it to Neutral from Outperform. 
  • DBS had a lousy quarter but too cheap to downgrade. DBS’s core earnings were a disappointment even if we overlook the goodwill issue. Core earnings were 13% below our expectations On the back of a 100bp spike in the SIBOR and a widening of the prime-HIBOR spread, DBS’s 4Q05 NIM rose 14bp qoq. This allowed DBS to leapfrog UOB to become Singapore’s highest-margin bank. Unfortunately, this was about its only positive. Treasury income fell to a new low, costs rose, provisions normalised while earnings disappointed. 
  • Still waiting for the yield curve to steepen. We would only Overweight banks when the yield curve starts to steepen again. Loan growth is still slow at the moment and may only rev up towards end-2006. Meanwhile, margin expansion is capped by deposit competition from foreign banks. 
  • UOB is our top choice, OCBC has capital management value, DBS needs to address its sputtering treasury income. We highlight UOB as our sector pick, on reasons stated above. UOB’s core P/E (12.9x) and P/BV (1.4x) are slightly higher than DBS’s but we expect it to have the strongest cash ROE in FY06. DBS badly needs to revive its treasury earnings before its ROE can improve; it could well be a 2H06 story. At 12.2x CY06 P/E and 1.4x P/BV, DBS is not expensive, but it has no near-term catalysts. OCBC has the best capital management value, given its large capital buffer. However, after a steady year of outperformance, its CY06 P/Adj.BV of 1.45x is now comparable to peers’ while core P/E of 15.9x looks expensive vs. peers. We believe that much is in the price.


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Extracts fm CIMB Report dated 6-Feb-06, 

4Q05 Results Preview


  • We do not believe that banks will report good 4Q results. We expect a lacklustre 4Q for Singapore banks. Typically in the fourth quarter, business-related fee income tapers off while costs spike as a result of bonus accruals. Also, provisions were abnormally low in 3Q this year and should normalise in 4Q. 
  • Persistently flat yield curve provides no catalyst for margins and treasury. The movement of the yield curve has not been conducive for bank earnings. The 3M SIBOR spiked 125bp in the quarter but the yield curve has stayed stubbornly flat, even inverting at the end of the quarter. That provided no opportunities for gapping income and product structuring. Although yield curve movements in 4Q were not helpful for gapping, the rising SIBOR would have differentiated the margin trends among the banks. With the Qualifying Foreign Banks bidding up deposit rates in tandem with the SIBOR’s appreciation, we do not envision any margin expansion for Singapore banks, with the exception of DBS (DBS SP, S$16.60 Outperform). 
  • Credit growth may be the only source of upside surprise in 2006. At the same time, credit growth appears fairly lethargic. Singapore’s 2005 loan growth (+2.2%) declined from 2004 (+4.5%) even as GDP growth accelerated. We do not expect system growth to accelerate significantly in the next six months. Further into 2006, loan growth could pick up as mortgages taken in 2005 are drawn down. 
  • Earnings growth momentum is slowing. Although Singapore banks are not expensive at 1.6x P/BV, we see earnings growth slowing in 2006. Interest income is only growing at single digits while provisions are already at a trough. The sector remains a Neutral. 
  • Maintain Neutral on the sector. Banks’ stock prices have not done well YTD. Our Neutral call on UOB (UOB SP, S$14.50, Neutral) is maintained while DBS remains an Outperform call.


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Singapore Banks - CitiGroup


Extracts fm CitiGroup Report dated 2-Feb-06,

Singapore Banks Big Picture

Macro signs look positive for 2006, but near-term bank earnings catalysts remain muted

Summary


  • Property recovery gathering pace: URA residential property price index in 4Q05 rose +1.4% qoq (3Q05: +1.2%), FY05 +3.9% yoy (FY04 +0.9%). More important, 8,955 units were sold in 2005 compared with 5,785 units in 2004
  • Dec unemployment rate 2.6%: Lowest since 2001 and reflective of improving labor market conditions, which could underpin stronger domestic demand
  • Loan growth may be bottoming out: Dec 2005 loan growth +0.7% mom (FY05 +2.2%YoY, Nov 2005 +0.8% mom), driven by loans to financial institutions (possibly transitory in nature) and construction
  • Stock market near six-year high, record volumes: YTD Jan avg. daily turnover (Source: Bloomberg) S$1.15bn near record levels.
  • 3M S$ SIBOR 3.36%, yield curve remains flat: 3M S$ SIBOR remains above fair value (estimated at 2.8% by our economists, vs. the 10-yr yield at 3.35%), for upward pressure on deposit rates and muted gapping/treasury income
  • DBS top pick (DBSM.SI, 1L, S$16.70, TP S$18.10) on reflation theme: We are bracing for a somber 4Q05 results season, but prospects are positive for a return to loan growth, stable margins and fee income growth later in the year.


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UOB - Morgan Stanley


Extracts fm Morgan Stanley Report dated 16-Jan-06,

Beware the Inverted Yield Curve

All the good news is priced in: Since the solid 3Q05 result, UOB has rallied by 12%. We believe it is time to take profit and downgrade to Equal-weight; valuation is fair and disappointment risk is building. UOB is trading on 13.4x F2006e earnings and 1.6x F2006e book.

Beware the inverted yield curve: The bulls on Singapore banks continue to trumpet capital management, economic growth, reflation and hope for a property boom. The yield curve is telling us the opposite.

Rising SIBOR is only one side of the equation: The shape and movement of the yield curve is more pertinent … it flattened sharply in 4Q05. Yes, deposit spreads are widening, but this is not enough to offset contracting asset spreads. Liabilities, with shorter tenors, re-price faster than assets.

Modeling the effects: We extend our analysis of the effects of a flat to inverted yield curve, first discussed in our downgrade of DBS Premature Appreciation, January 11, 2006. We present a simple model which demonstrates the negative earnings impact that banks confront.

Pending capital initiatives are not enough: OUE divestment and buy back activity will support the stock while earnings could disappoint … but we don’t think its enough to drive out-performance. The OUE divestment and buy back is factored into our modeling and target price derivation. UOB may even use the buy back to assist with the resolution of cross shareholdings. Our disappoint risk thesis outlined in A Capital Thought, January 5, 2006, still stands. OUE is lumpy and capital adequacy is close to MAS minimums and rating agency guidelines.



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UOB


BT, Published January 12, 2006
UOB rally expected to peter out

But of five reports by foreign brokers, three call for a 'buy' or 'overweight'

ALTHOUGH investors initially welcomed United Overseas Bank's announcement last Friday of a $600 million share buyback, some analysts have suggested that further upside may be limited. Of five reports by foreign brokers after the buyback announcement, three call for a 'buy' or 'overweight' on UOB, one is 'neutral' and one an outright 'sell'. UOB's shares, in the meantime, have been treading water, after having surged 40 cents to $15.20 last Friday following the share buyback news.

The bank said the buyback has three objectives - to manage its capital structure to achieve an efficient mix, to manage surplus capital so it may be returned to shareholders in an expedient and cost-efficient way and to improve return on equity. Some observers have speculated that the move will put UOB's 57 per cent subsidiary Overseas Union Enterprises (OUE) into play, given that OUE owns 3.2 per cent of UOB and that UOB has until July to reduce its OUE stake to 10 per cent.

Citigroup Global Markets, however, has called a 'sell' on UOB, with a target price of $15.38. It says in a report on Monday that although the buyback is a catalyst for UOB to sell its OUE stake, and despite such a sale being potentially positive for UOB shareholders, earnings-related worries could cap the share price. 'We are concerned about the near-term outlook for (UOB's) recent overseas acquisitions,' Citigroup says. 'Like its peers, UOB will, to some extent, benefit from a return to loans-pricing power. However, costs are likely to remain on an uptrend and provisions are at their cycle trough.' US broker Goldman Sachs is neutral on UOB, saying that although the buyback will provide downside support for the stock, it sees better top and bottomline growth at DBS Bank, given the latter's loan growth momentum and improving margins. Goldman's target price for UOB is $15.80. UBS Investment Research, on the other hand, rates UOB a 'buy' with a $16.80 target price. 'The exercise in our view is directed at achieving UOB's goal of 15 per cent ROE by the end of this year,' UBS says. 'This buyback would lift our current 2006 ROE estimate up by 60 basis points to 13.7 per cent . . . Our price target is derived from the Gordon Growth Model with an ROE assumption of 13 per cent, cost of equity of 9.2 per cent, payout of 50 per cent and growth of 6.5 per cent.' Nomura Asian Equity Research has pegged UOB's target price at $16.50. 'We believe UOB may potentially return up to 59 cents per share via a distribution-in-specie of OUE shares ahead of the July deadline,' Nomura says. 'We forecast a net dividend of 64 cents per share on a net payout of 56 per cent in FY06. Taken together, we see a potential total net 'dividend' return of $1.23.' Lehman Brothers has called an 'overweight' with a target price of $16.50 based on UOB's 'significant capital management potential'.

UOB was unchanged at $15.20 yesterday with 5.7 million units traded.



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UOB - JPMorgan


Extracts fm JPMorgan Report dated 3-Jan-06,

Upgrade to Overweight; Price target S$16.30


  • In light of our upcoming published report, we are upgrading our rating for UOB from Neutral to Overweight with a new 12-m price target of S$16.30 vs S$15.50 previously.

  • We believe UOB holds the most promise on the capital management theme with the highest payout ratio of the three banks and potential returns from the likely divestment of non-core assets, i.e. OUE and Negara Properties.

  • Also, with a significant amount of groundwork done, the bank has the broadest ASEAN consumer footprint of the three Singapore banks. UOB Thailand is expected to contribute positively to the growth profile of UOB in 2006 while Malaysia could also see stronger growth as a result of the branching liberalization taking place from 2006. We also anticipate that domestic earnings are likely benefit from a general improvement in property and construction market conditions in 2006.

  • Our new 12-m price target of S$16.30 is based on our two stage DDM valuation tool which assumes a fair price to book multiple of 1.75x based on normalized ROEs of 12.8%, COE of 8.9% and long term growth of 3.7%. Key risks. Domestic loan market share and margins remains under pressure due to intense competition. Also, sharply higher interest rates (this is not our base case) may negatively impact upon domestic economic growth.


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OCBC


BT, Published January 11, 2006
OCBC to buy 12.2% stake in China bank

In 570m yuan deal, OCBC will become second-largest shareholder in Ningbo Commercial Bank


(SINGAPORE) In a widely anticipated move, OCBC said yesterday it has agreed to buy a 12.2 per cent stake in China's (NCB) for 570 million yuan or around S$120 million. OCBC will become NCB's second-largest shareholder and the first Singapore bank to own part of a China bank in China. Market observers see the move as a major achievement given that legions of big international lenders and private equity firms have Chinese banks in their sights.

OCBC will acquire new shares in NCB for cash in a deal priced at 2.1 times the Chinese bank's net tangible asset (NTA) value per share at Dec 31, 2004.

OCBC chief executive David Conner said this valuation for NCB - which ranks eighth among 113 city commercial banks in China in terms of assets - compares with a price range of around 2-3 times NTA for comparable transactions involving such banks. OCBC will fund its NCB purchase internally and the transaction is expected to be completed in the first half of this year.

OCBC talked to many banks in China and was in discussions with NCB for more than a year, Mr Conner said. OCBC was drawn to NCB because the latter is 'very customer and small and medium enterprise focused', he said.

NCB also shares OCBC's philosophy of having employees own shares in the bank. More than 1,000 of NCB's 1,300 employees owned a total of 20 per cent of its stock prior to the issue of new shares to OCBC. The single-largest shareholder is Ningbo Financial Bureau with a current stake of 15 per cent.

Mr Conner said the investment in NCB is 'the right size' for OCBC, which would not want to look at investments of US$1 billion or more that big international banks are considering. With NCB growing at 20-30 per cent a year, it will need capital, and OCBC is prepared to put in more capital, said Mr Conner. Over time, he hopes OCBC can increase its stake. At present, regulations in China limit OCBC to owning a maximum of 20 per cent of a bank there.

NCB has 65 branches and sub-branches in the coastal city of Ningbo, which is in Zhejiang province. OCBC will consider investments in banks in other parts of China, but 'we don't want to talk about other investments as we have just gotten married', Mr Conner quipped. China is a huge market and will be 'a very significant part of OCBC's business over time', he said. But he did not want to specify targets in terms of how large a component China should be of OCBC's overall business.

OCBC will provide technical assistance to NCB through a structured training and development programme. Founded in 1997, NCB had assets of 34.3 billion yuan at Dec 31, 2004. Its non-performing loan ratio was 1.2 per cent and its capital adequacy ratio was 10.8 per cent.



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UOB Proposed Share BuyBack


Decrease in cash to cancel out Shareholder Equity.
Debt increases ("more efficent capital mix") but ROE improves.
No change in book value.
This news lead to a 40c rise on Friday.


Report says to enable UOB to buy back of shares held by UOL.


A broker raise the price target to $16+
At $16, price to NTA($8.93) will be about 1.8X.
Annualised Earnings from first 9 months is at $1.108,  PER will be 14.4.


Numbers still looks reasonable.
My intent is to hold for dividends and divestment goodies.
Divestment of OUE if returned to shareholders is approx $0.50.
Will consider buy more below $14.50  before divestment, $14.20 (1.6X P/NTA) after divestment.
Depends on market condition later.



 



-- Edited by tfwee at 16:54, 2006-01-09

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Extracted from UOB

Singapore, 6 January 2006 - In exercise of the share purchase mandate renewed by shareholders at the extraordinary general meeting held on 27 April 2005, United Overseas Bank Limited (“UOB” or “the Bank”) will set aside S$600 million for on-market purchases of its ordinary shares for cancellation. The share purchase will be executed through a combination of the normal trading counter, and/or odd lots counter, depending on market conditions, and will be carried out in an orderly manner to minimise undue movement in UOB’s share price. Shares purchased by UOB will be announced in accordance with the rules of The Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited. The share purchase is proposed in view of UOB’s objectives of:
(i) managing the capital structure of UOB, with a view to achieving an efficient capital mix;
(ii) managing surplus capital, such that surplus capital and funds which are in excess of UOB’s requirements may be returned to UOB shareholders in an expedient and cost-efficient manner; and
(iii) improving return on equity. Under Banking (Amendment) Regulations 2004, affiliated entities of a bank have until 17 July 2006 to comply with the regulation that they cannot hold in aggregate more than 2% of the voting power in the bank. There are certain restrictions against an increase in the meantime of the aggregate percentage shareholding in the bank held by its affiliated entities. The affiliated entities of UOB currently hold in aggregate around 4% of UOB’s paid-up capital. A reduction in the paid-up capital of UOB as a result of the share purchase may increase such aggregate percentage shareholding and if required, necessary steps would have to be taken to comply with the restrictions.


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RE: Singapore Banks


Extracted from UOB Investor Relations Web Page


Singapore, 21 December 2005 -


 


UOB International Investment Private Limited


(“UOBII”) has undertaken a tender offer for 46% of the shares in P.T. Bank


Buana Indonesia Tbk at Rp 954 per share .


The Tender Offer was made on 21 November 2005, and closed on


19 December 2005.


As at the close of the Tender Offer, UOB has received acceptances of


466,805,113 Bank Buana shares, representing approximately 8.1% of Bank


Buana’s total share capital. Based on the Tender Offer Price of Rp 954 per


share (which is also the price UOBII recently paid for the acquisition of an


additional 30% stake in Bank Buana), the total cash consideration for the


8.1% stake would amount to Rp 445,332,077,802 (approximately US$45.2


million). Following the close of the Tender Offer, UOBII’s shareholding in its


subsidiary, Bank Buana, had increased from 53% to approximately 61.1%.


As at 30 June 2005, the net tangible assets of Bank Buana amounted to


Rp 2,124 billion. Bank Buana share price closed at Rp 950 yesterday.


 


COMMENTS


Decided to check this because I saw another report from another source quoted Bank Buana’s NTA to be Rp 2.1billion - it should have been Rp2,124 billion.

This represents a 2.6X of the NTA, a bit on the high side.



-- Edited by ahkian at 23:15, 2005-12-28

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Singapore Banks - DBSVickers


Extracts fm DBSVickers Report dated 15-Dec-05,

Banking Sector

Five cheers for 2006

The Banking sector performance has lagged the STI so far this year - the SESFIN Index rose 4.7% YTD, while the STI climbed 12.5%. OCBC was the star performer this year, rising 16% YTD, while DBS was at the tail end, gaining only 1.2%. Much of OCBC’s gains this year were due to capital restructuring, inclusion of NISP, higher non-interest income, lower amortisation for intangible assets and goodwill, and provisions writebacks. The flattening of the yield curve featured prominently this year and negatively impacted all three banks, with DBS the most affected. Looking ahead, we are positive about the sector. There are five factors that should drive the share prices and total returns in the banking sector in the year ahead: (i) divestment story, (ii) loans growth driven by housing, (iii) steepening yield curve, (iv) expansion of NIM, and (v) lower NPL provisions and writebacks. We maintain an Overweight call on the sector, and our top pick is UOB. We do not have a rating on DBS due to conflict of interest.



  • Divestment of non-banking assets. Both OCBC and UOB have assets that needs to be divested by July 2006. OCBC needs to divest a minimum of 12% of Robinson, and 7% of Straits Trading, which works out to a net gain of c. S$93m or 3.0 cents per share. UOB needs to divest both at least 18% of UOL and 47% of OUE, and gain net S$1,013m, or 66 cents per share. We expect OCBC to pare down its stakes through trade sales, while UOB will divest via distribution in specie. Either way, shareholders should be able to benefit from the divestment with UOB shareholders gaining relatively more.
  • Loans growth driven by housing and construction. Our year end DBU loan growth is forecasted at 2.3%, given the sluggish domestic lending activity despite improving growth numbers. In 2006, we expect loan growth to accelerate to about 4.5%, with GDP growth likely to climb to 5.3% from about 5.1% this year. In addition, given the benign but improving GDP outlook for the regional economies, we expect loans to be one of the growth drivers for banks in 2006. The risk to this expectation is that loans taken up recently are for new developments, which means they are usually deferred and hence may not be captured in 2006.
  • Steepening of yield curve. In the past year, the SGD yield curve has flattened considerably and the resultant effect was the loss of gapping and trading opportunities for the treasury business unit of the banks. Given that the current year profits are bereft of gains from a steeper yield curve, there can only be upside when the yield curve reverts to the mean. Our economics team expects the long end of the SGD yield curve to rise about 25 bps from current levels (c. 3.3%) and the short end to fall to 2.7% by end-2006. As such, the steepened yield curve will help widen NIM and arguably usher in the return of earnings contribution from the treasury.
  • Expansion of NIM. NIM is expected to widen in 2006. In recent weeks, all the local banks have been engaging in either increasing lending rates and/or reducing cost of funds. Housing loan rates had been adjusted upwards by 75 bps to 250bps in some instances, while auto loans have all but crept up. There is also competition to attract deposits so that net borrowing banks do not need to go to the expensive inter-bank market to fund their loans. Indeed, NIM for the three banks have been improving with the exception of UOB in the past two quarters. The active effort to widen NIM augurs well for banks’ earnings in 2006.
  • Lower NPLs and recoveries. In a reflationary environment, banks tend to benefit through recoveries of NPLs previously written off. It was no different in the last quarter and going into 2006. In 3Q05, OCBC benefited from a net recovery of S$43m. Since 4Q04, NPL ratios of all three banks had been declining, and we expect this trend to continue in 2006. Recoveries will help the bottom line of the banks.


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UOB - Daiwa


Extracts fm Daiwa Report dated 8 -Dec-05,

Investment summary

We maintain our 3 (Hold) rating on United Overseas Bank (UOB) following the company’s announcement of the pricing of its US$500m preference-share offer. We believe the fund raising should be no surprise, since the proposed offering was announced on 28 November.

Fundamentals


  • UOB will pay a dividend rate of 5.796% for these securities up to 15 March 2016, after which the dividend rate resets quarterly to the three-month London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) plus 174.5 basis points if the securities are not redeemed by then.
  • In our report on UOB published on 31 October, A capital proposition, we assumed the company would raise S$1bn in tier-1 qualifying preference shares, and return the entire amount to its shareholders. We have now revised down our assumption to S$845m (corresponding to the latest US$500m fund-raising announcement), and assumed that the entire proceeds will be returned to shareholders in early 2006.
  • By our estimates, our assumption change is minor and will have an imperceptible (less than 0.5%) impact to our earnings forecasts for FY05 and FY06.
  • However, since we expect shareholders to receive about S$155m less (or about S$0.10 per share less) in net special dividends, we have lowered our six-month target price, based on a multistage dividend-discount model, to S$15.30 from S$15.40.


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Singapore Banks - DBSVickers


Extracts fm DBSVickers Report dated 1-Dec-05,

Banking Sector

October 2005 loans data: Mixed

Oct 2005 non-bank loans data showed a fall in DBU loans of –0.1% q-o-q for the first time in 7 months, led by fall of 2.3% in loans to buildings and construction sector and a decline of 0.4% in car loans. Housing loans rose 0.4% in line with expectations. We are not too worried over the apparent slowdown in DBU loans as the sharp drop in the buildings and construction sector can be explained by loans paid down due to higher sales of residential properties. ACU loans grew at a slower pace of 0.3%, led by loans to businesses, particularly a 5% rise in loans to general commerce. We remain positive on the banking sector given the robust outlook in the property sector and the general benign forecast of the Singapore economy. We expect Singapore’s economy to grow 5.3% in 2006. Due to DBS’ interest in our research house, we cannot issue a rating for DBS. Our top pick at current price levels is OCBC.


  • Domestic loans fall for 1st time in 7 months. DBU loans to non-bank customers decelerate for the first time in 7 months, posting –0.1% q-o-q in October to S$180.3bn. Loans to businesses, which according to a newly released MAS breakdown, comprised about 49% of total DBU loans, contracted 0.5% from previous months levels. This was led by a 2.3% q-o-q decline in loans to the construction sector. This can be explained by loans taken up by property developers being paid down due to increase sales. In addition, there is a lag effect before loans to new developments pick up. Loans to consumers strengthen however, to +0.3% q-o-q from Sep 2005, led by rise in housing (+0.4%) and credit card (+1.1%).

  • ACU loans continue to rise, but at a slower rate. Loans to Asian currency units (ACU) remained robust, gaining 0.4% q-o-q in October to S$152.1bn. The pickup was mainly driven by +0.3% increase in ACU loans to businesses, in particular a 5% rise in loans to general commerce and +0.4% growth in the manufacturing sector.

  • Overweight maintained. We remain positive on the banking sector given the robust outlook in the property sector and the general benign forecast of the Singapore economy. In addition, the recent October IPI data pointed to strong growth in the technology and offshore marine sectors, putting upward pressure on our DBS GDP growth forecast of 5.3%. We maintain our overweight call on the banking sector. Please note that we cannot recommend DBS due to perceived conflict of interest. Between OCBC and UOB, we prefer OCBC at current price levels.


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DBS - Philips


Extracts fm Philips Report dated 22-Nov,05,

Sale of Shenton Way building. It was reported in the Business Times on 09 Nov 05 that DBS Group intends to sell part of its investment properties, DBS Tower 1 and Tower 2. Potential proceeds from the sale amount to approximately $700m or $821.60 per square foot. Market watches expect the bank to lease back the property for at least another 5 years before it moves into the new premises (the Business & Financial Centre at Marina Bay for instance) as anchor tenant.

If materialized, capital gain from the sale is estimated to be at around $400m or $0.27 per share, representing a yield of 1.7%. This addition will also raise the Tier 1 ratio by 0.6% to 11%. We view this as positive as the group can use the gains to foster more growth through expansions and acquisitions or reward shareholders with a higher dividend payout. In tandem with its healthy earnings, the group has worked towards improving its dividend payout. Dividend payout for FY05, if annualized, translates to 44.4% of net profit (39% in FY03). In addition to DBS Tower 1 and 2, the group also owns investment properties namely the PWC Building and DBS Tampines Centre with total market values of $461 million or $0.31 per share.

Surging cost of funding. The surging Singapore Interbank Offered Rates (SIBOR) limits the banks from capitalizing on the gapping opportunities. The benchmark 3-month SIBOR rose to a five-year high of 3.04% (Figure 1). This will put induced pressure on the local banks to restructure or increase their loan rates. For instance, DBS raised its special mortgage rate from 4.5% to 4.75% p.a. effective from early December. This was the 3rd increase of 25bps by DBS this year. With the lowest loans-to-deposit ratio at 64%, and being the largest net Interbank lender in Singapore, the group’s earnings are likely to be less vulnerable to the rising funding cost as compared to UOB and OCBC.

In addition, we noted the nearing expiry of DBS Bank HK Ltd 7.75% fixed rate subordinate notes on 24 Jan 2007. This subordinate debt that is worth US$350 million or S$427, constituted 8% of the group’s total dated subordinated term debts or 3% of the group’s total long-term debts in 2004. In the event that the group decides to refinance this subordinate note, it will likely inject an upward pressure to its cost of funding and constrain NIM.

Recommendation. A stable economic outlook, coupled with the excess funds from the divestment of investment properties, the group is poised for better growth ahead. Concerns that would jeopardize its earnings performance would be a continual surge in funding cost, weakening of the economy and lackluster treasury activities. DBS’s share price has run 6% since our lastest recommendation. At $16.10, our target price of $17.30 (1.45x FY06 BVS) represents a lower price upside of 7.5%. Revised to Hold, based purely on valuations.



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Singapore Banks


BT, Published November 10, 2005
Poor loans growth a setback for local banks

THANK goodness for foreign banks, savers must be muttering to themselves as these institutions court them for their funds and, in doing so, push the local banks into improving their own savings products.

Maybank this week upped the stakes on the savings front by launching an online savings account offering higher interest rates with ATM access. Citibank announced further higher rates for its ''unfixed' deposit product.

The three local banks - DBS Group Holdings, United Overseas Bank and OCBC Bank - have fought back by increasing interest rates for fixed deposits though they have yet to offer similar online savings account products.

Actually, OCBC Bank's wholly owned Bank of Singapore finatiq.com does offer an online savings account, although it is little publicised. 'Who?' some may ask - because after the 2000 dotcom bust, the website has maintained such a low profile that it is not clear how much OCBC wants to use its finatiq.com to bring in deposits.

The three local banks have to increase interest rates for savers in line with a rising interest rate environment or run the risk of losing customers who could be tempted to invest some of those funds in higher-margin unit trusts.

Typically, when the economy is growing, local banks do well as they are able to lend more at higher interest rates in line with a rising interest rate climate, so paying more to depositors does not matter.

The problem for the local banks is that deposits and savings are rising at a faster rate than loans are. Latest official data shows that there is little growth in lending. At end-September, lending growth was hovering around 1.5 per cent while the increase in customer deposits was zipping along at almost 10 per cent. The 12-month loan-to-deposit ratio continued its relentless downward trend.

The overall picture points to a double whammy for the banks - an almost stagnant loan pie means they cannot increase lending rates as much as they would like while having to pay out more to their depositors.

As OCBC Bank noted yesterday, the average rate on interest-earning assets increased by 69 basis points over the first nine months of this year, but the cost of funds rose at a higher rate of 81 basis points, resulting in net interest margin decline to 1.81 per cent from 1.90 per cent. Its loan-to-deposit ratio fell to 87.4 per cent from 91.8 per cent a year ago.

DBS was the only bank of the three to show an improvement in the group loan-to-deposit ratio. At the end of September, it was 68.9 per cent - up from 62.8 per cent a year before.

But DBS continued to labour under its $115.6 billion mountain of deposits, for which it had to almost double the interest rate it was paying - an average rate of 1.15 per cent for nine months of this year, up from the average rate of 0.64 per cent in the corresponding part of 2004.

DBS's average net interest margin for the first nine months of this year fell one point to 1.82 per cent.

UOB suffered pretty much the same fate as OCBC. Its loan-to deposit ratio fell to 78.9 per cent from 83.3 per cent a year ago.

In UOB's case, while it can continue to boast of having the highest average interest margin of 1.99 per cent among the local rivals, it is still declining. It was 2.11 per cent in 2004.

Local banks have traditionally performed better than foreign banks in a rising interest rate environment because their much bigger branch network means easier access to cheap funds, but the poor loans growth figure is a setback. So while the local banks in the third quarter reported increased profits from a year ago, a closer look at details paints a less rosy picture.



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Singapore Banks - CitiGroup


Extracts fm CitiGroup Report dated 10-Nov-05, 

  • UOB did best vs consensus in 3Q05, but the fee upside was capital markets related. Loans rose, margins still under pressure. Capital management aside, difficult to identify earnings catalysts.

  • DBS: top pick on reflation/rising interest rates theme. DBS enjoys a margin advantage from rising S$ SIBOR. It has the largest Singapore mortgage book (est 27% share), benefits from corporate loan re-pricing. DBS HK surprised on the margin front. DBS’ “shortcoming” was that it fell short of consensus in 3Q05

  • OCBC: still the best capital, regional play. Tier-1 of 12.8% (DBS, UOB 10%) plus unlocking of value from non-core/property assets (4Q05 may be boosted by a $37m special dividend from Raffles Holdings). Malaysia still a key growth driver for the bank. 3Q05 saw a welcome return to positive earnings momentum

  • 4Q05 Outlook: S$ SIBOR up again, limited loan growth: 3M-SIBOR is now at 2.9%, +50bpsMoM and +138bpsYTD. Deposit cost rises likely to intensify. The yield curve remains flat with only 41bps separating 3M SIBOR and 10-yr bond yields. Mortgages have re-priced 3 times in 2005 and could go further. Mortgage loan volumes remain elusive; still too early in the property cycle

  • Concerns: Indonesia remains vulnerable in our view to margin squeeze and asset quality concerns. Cost growth was one reason DBS fell short of consensus. Weaker capital markets may affect non interest income


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Singapore Banks - Lim and Tan


Extracts fm Lim and Tan Report dated 10-Nov-05, 

  • There is little to comment on OCBC’s Q3 results, coming after DBS’ and UOB’s, other than the fact that excluding exceptional gains of a year ago, OCBC would have done the best. Yet, in other areas, such as interest margin, loan growth, OCBC has lagged others.

  • Key point is that the 3 bank stocks have put up an uninspiring stock market performance this year, which could be attributed to:


    • Big IPOs of China banks this year. Bank of Communications in May this year, and China Construction Bank last month, which sucked up almost US$10 bln.

    • Improved prospects for Japanese banks because of the end of a long deflationary period in Japan, resulting in strong stock market performance of the big Japanese bank stocks this year.

    • The strong profit growth at international banks like UBS, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, especially in areas like wealth management.


  • It is therefore a lot more than just a case of competition from foreign banks, falling margins, and lethargic loan growth.

  • Hopefully, with the strong recovery of the residential property market in the past 12 months, and the expected recovery of consumer spending, thanks to better economic outlook, prospects for local banks will be looking up in 2006, hence our recommendation to buy bank stocks.


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OCBC


BT, November 9, 2005, 2.35 pm

OCBC posts 11% rise in Q3 earnings

SINGAPORE - Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp reported on Wednesday that third-quarter profit rose 11 per cent, boosted by increasing loans and contributions from investments. Net earnings rose to $355.1 million (US$208.7 million) for the three months ended Sept 30 from $319.5 million a year ago, the bank said in a statement. Compared to the second quarter net profit of $304 million, Q3 profit was 17 per cent higher.

'The improved earnings were driven by higher net interest income, significant growth in non-interest income and recoveries which more than offset allowances for loans and other assets,' OCBC said. Net profit for the first nine months of 2005 was $957 million, up 10 per cent over the same period last year.



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Singapore Banks


Extracts fm CitiGroup Report dated 2-Nov-05,


  • Reflation - DBS top pick (DBSM.SI, 1L, S$15.30, TP S$18.10): 3M SIBOR at 2.52% (near 5-year highs), benefits DBS as the largest S$ interbank lender, large corporate lender, and has the highest operational leverage of its peers.

  • DBS raises mortgage rates: DBS has largest Singapore mortgage book of its peers, and just raised its mortgage board rate by 25bps, the third time this year

  • Deposit wars more intense, pushing up funding costs: Average counter rates for 3M time deposits edged up 11bps for the month, while rates for balances above S$50k rose around 10bps and hover in the range of 1.5%-1.8%. 1M-12M SIBOR yields rose an average 13bps in Oct 2005

  • Non-interest income dull from flat yield curve: Recent 3Q05 bank results continue to show weak treasury income, as the long end of the yield curve remains just 51bps above 3M money 

  • Mortgages still weak, but home sales improving: URA 3Q05 data suggests that residential sales may be picking up in the resale market, rather than just from primary launches, which could spur current weak mortgage volumes

  • Sep CPI jumped 0.6% yoy and 0.2% mom as energy costs continues to filter through in the form of more expensive holiday travel and higher transport costs


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KK


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Posts: 1236
Date:
Mortgage Rates


CNA, 31 October 2005 1943 hrs

Singapore mortgage rates unlikely to rise too much: analysts

SINGAPORE : Local mortgage rates are on the rise again.

OCBC says it will be raising its mortgage rates next month. The move comes hot on the heels of a weekend announcement by DBS that it is hiking rates by 25 basis points. And when contacted, UOB said it would monitor the situation.

Many analysts tell Channel NewsAsia that it is unlikely that mortgage rates have too much upside from here, and they are also not expected to dampen housing demand.

Singapore's Big Three local banks have raised mortgage rates by around 50 basis points so far this year, while several foreign lenders have hiked interest on home loans by around 100 basis points.

OCBC Bank said it will further raise its private housing loan rates from December 1, but did not specify by how much. This comes as DBS sent letters to its customers saying it will raise mortgage rates by 25 basis points from December 5. DBS is citing rising interbank rates, which have created upward pressures on the cost of funds.

But Daiwa Securities echoed a widely-held view in the market that rates may not have too much upside ahead. Said David Lum, senior investment analyst at Daiwa, "The recent rate hike regime by the Fed looks like it's about to end very soon. And if we are talking about a situation in which the global economy is not growing as fast as expectations, then we might see a pause in this upcycle."

Still, according to analysts, the current upcycle in rates is not likely to significantly dampen property demand. Said Mr Lum, "I don't think at this stage of the cycle that is a major factor, because for property buyers now the prospect of higher rentals and capital appreciation, I suspect, would overwhelm the cost considerations of gearing at this point." Market watchers say it would take an increase of as much as 1 to 2 percentage points in mortgage rates to have a perceivable dent on housing demand. And banks are not likely to raise their rates so sharply because the strength of the property market is currently only being felt in the high-end segment. - CNA /ct


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KK


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Posts: 1236
Date:
UOB - DBSVickers


Extracts fm DBSVickers Report dated 31-Oct-05,

3Q05 results: Non interest income surprise : Maintain Buy

UOB 3Q05 results were above our expectations. Net profit rose 25% y-o-y and 13% q-o-q to S$463m, with growth mainly from unexpected 26% q-o-q increase in investment related activities and fund management. Interest income rose 5% to S$1,229m from 2Q05 while interest expense rose at a faster rate of 9% to S$651m, which is reflected in the continued decline in NIM falling to 1.93%. Customer loans rose 2% to S$65.7bn while NPL fell to 6.2% from 6.7% in 2Q05. Loan-Deposit ratio fell 2% to 78.9% from 80.3%. ROE rose to 13.6% from 11.9% in 2Q05, inching its way to the 15% internal ROE target. We revised our earnings estimates but maintain Buy with a revised target price of S$16.00 based on 14x PE and 1.6x P/ RNAV.



-- Edited by KK at 20:05, 2005-10-31

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KK


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Date:
DBS - OCBC


Extracts fm OCBC Report dated 31-Oct-05,

Better interest income and loan growth

In line set of 3Q05 earnings. DBS posted 3Q05 net earnings of S$446m, in line with our expectation of S$448m but below market expectation of S$460m as polled by Reuters. For 9-mth, total earnings came in at S$1299m, down 22% YoY. However, stripping off last year’s non-recurring items, net earnings would have been up 11%.

On the back of improving customer loans and margins, its net interest income increased 12% YoY or 5% QoQ to S$728m. Customer loans grew 17% YoY to S$78.8b at end Sep 2005. Loan-to-deposit ratio came in at 69%. This is also an improvement over 63% a year ago and 68% in June 2005. Net interest margins improved from 1.85% in 3Q04 to 1.87% by 3Q05. For 9M, net interest margins was fairly stable at 1.82%.

Fee income grew 6% to S$266m in 3Q05. Growth came from investment banking, asset management, stockbroking and credit card fees. However, sales of wealth management products fell from S$2.55b to S$2.04b in 3Q05. This led to a 19% drop in contribution to S$34m. Total non interest income declined 21% YoY and 12% QoQ to S$351m, resulting in a 1.7% YoY drop in total income to S$1098m. Operating expenses rose 5% YoY or 6% QoQ to S$529m. As a result, cost-to-income ratio increased from 46% to 49%. Non-performing loan ratio showed further improvement, down from 2.6% a year ago to 2.0%.

Maintained quarterly DPS of 15 cents. For 3Q05, management declared a 15 cents dividend, same amount as 2Q05. Dividend will be payable on 28 Nov 2005 and shares will be quoted ex-dividend on 11 Nov 2005. This is line with management’s policy to pay a progressive and sustainable amount of dividend.

Retaining full year estimate of S$1800m. As the 3Q05 results were fairly in line with our expectation, we are retaining our full year earnings of S$1800.4m. At current price of S$15.30, valuations for the stock remain reasonably attractive and we retain our BUY rating and fair value of S$17.70. Based on 56 cents for the full year, gross yield is 3.7%.



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