Continue reading this on our app for a better experience

Open in App
Floating Button
Home Capital Broker's Calls

PhillipCapital remains overweight on banks ahead of FY2021 results, OCBC 'most attractive'

Jovi Ho
Jovi Ho • 3 min read
PhillipCapital remains overweight on banks ahead of FY2021 results, OCBC 'most attractive'
“Valuations for OCBC are the most attractive and [have the] largest upside surprise from dividends.”
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

With attractive dividend yields, excess capital ratios and interest rates dipping slightly in January, PhillipCapital Research analyst Glenn Thum remains positive on Singapore banks.

“Bank dividend yields are attractive with upside surprise due to excess capital ratios. Improving economic conditions and rising interest rates remain tailwinds for the banking sector. Singapore Exchange (SGX) is another beneficiary of higher interest rates,” writes Thum.

In a Feb 9 note, Thum is maintaining “overweight” on the sector.

Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation (OCBC) is a “buy” with a target price of $14.22 and a dividend yield of 4.32%, with total returns of 14.04%. “Valuations for OCBC are the most attractive and largest upside surprise from dividends.”

Investors should “accumulate” DBS Group Holdings and United Overseas Bank Limited (UOB), writes Thum, with target prices of $35.90 and $31.30 respectively. The two banks offer total returns of 1.62% and 1.82% respectively, according to Thum’s forecasts.

Thum’s 4QFY2021 PATMI estimates are $1.4 billion for DBS (consensus: $1.48 billion), $1.3 billion for UOB ($0.97 billion) and $1.1 billion for OCBC ($1.12 billlion).

See also: Test debug host entity

The three local banks will be releasing their 4QFY2021 results this month, with DBS on Feb 14, UOB on Feb 16 and OCBC on Feb 23. “For DBS, we have forecasted revenue of $3.18 billion for 4QFY2021 (consensus: $3.61 billion). For UOB, we have forecasted revenue of $2.66 billion ($2.52 billion). For OCBC, we have forecasted revenue of $2.45 billion ($2.7 billion).

Interest rates were down slightly in January. The 3M-SOR was down 5 basis points m-o-m to 0.32% while the 3M-SIBOR remained flat m-o-m at 0.44%.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong and Malaysia loans growth continued in December. Hong Kong’s domestic loans growth increased to 3.79% y-o-y but fell by 0.84% m-o-m in December. The loans growth for December showed a slight dip from the previous month, but it was still the fourth-highest positive loans growth y-o-y recorded for 2021.

See also: Maybank downgrades ComfortDelGro in contrarian call over Addison Lee acquisition worries

Malaysia’s domestic loans growth saw an increase of 4.51% y-o-y in December and rose 0.53% m-o-m in December. The increase y-o-y in December was the highest recorded since May 2019.

Preliminary Securities Daily Average Value (SDAV) for January fell 20% y-o-y to $1,194 million, as the Covid-19 situation stabilised in Singapore and community cases continued to fall.

The top five equity index futures turnover saw an increase of 1.7% y-o-y in January to 14.99 million contracts mainly due to the higher trading volumes of its Nifty 50 Index Futures and Nikkei 225 Index Futures.

Notably, the FTSE China A50 Index Futures increased 4.9% m-o-m to 8.6 million despite the introduction of HKEX’s MSCI China A50 Connect Index futures and the FTSE Taiwan Index Futures increased 23% m-o-m to 1.1 million.

As at 1.05pm, shares in DBS are trading 29 cents higher, or 0.79% up, at $36.87; while shares in UOB are trading 11 cents lower, or 0.34% down, at $32.54; and shares in OCBC are trading 4 cents higher, or 0.30% up, at $13.17.

Photo: Bloomberg

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2024 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.