HomeNewsBusinessMoneycontrol ResearchIdeas for Profit: HDFC Bank well poised to leap ahead, buy

Ideas for Profit: HDFC Bank well poised to leap ahead, buy

We expect HDFC Bank’s considerable moat to aid sustainable high future earnings growth, notwithstanding its large size, making it a must own core holding among Indian equities

July 23, 2018 / 16:02 IST
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Neha Dave Moneycontrol Research

HDFC Bank, one of the largest and most profitable private sector banks, posted yet another quarter of strong performance backed by healthy loan book growth. Though the headline number for the June quarter was slightly lower than street expectations, core operating numbers, excluding one-off investment, were strong. We see Q1 as a speed breaker, not a derailment, in the bank’s upward journey.

In the current scenario, where public sector banks are saddled with huge non-performing assets and constrained by lack of sufficient capital, we expect the bank to strengthen its corporate lending by gaining market share from public sector banks while maintaining its leadership position in the retail segment.

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We see the bank churning profitable growth over the next few years as it enjoys dual moats (competitive advantage) on both the asset as well as liabilities side with high margin retail loans constituting 55 percent of its total loan and low-cost current and savings accounts (CASA) accounting for 42 percent of total deposits.

Quarter at a glance HDFC Bank’s Q1 FY19 numbers were consistent, except for the marginal blip in topline growth. Net interest income (NII, difference between interest income and expense) increased 15 percent year-on-year driven by robust loan book growth, but was partially off-set by fall in net interest margin (NIM) to 4.2 percent, down 20 bps YoY.

Other income growth was muted at 9 percent YoY as strong growth in core fees income was partially negated by loss on revaluation and sale of investments. The 23 percent YoY growth in fees and commission income was underpinned by growth in fees on third-party distribution of financial products, processing fees and credit card charges. Despite having an option to spread the provisions for mark-to-market (MTM) investments losses equally over 4 quarters, the bank chose to recognise the entire MTM loss of Rs 391 crore in the quarter gone by.