Equity Bottom-Up

Daily Equities Bottom-Up: FBN Holdings: A Contrarian Call from Behind the Hydrocarbon Clouds and Shadows and more

In this briefing:

  1. FBN Holdings: A Contrarian Call from Behind the Hydrocarbon Clouds and Shadows

1. FBN Holdings: A Contrarian Call from Behind the Hydrocarbon Clouds and Shadows

FBN Holdings Plc (FBNH NL) is the oldest and second-largest bank in Nigeria with a market share of 14% of domestic loans.

FBN’s solid franchise provides robust revenue generation capacity (especially in e-business and insurance) plus a solid and cheap funding base complemented by a strong liquidity profile. The Group’s solid funding base of low cost retail deposits, mainly CASA, underpins one of the most competitive in the sector.

Under new management, FBN is focused on a legacy asset quality clean-up and enhancing risk controls. The franchise has exhibited resilience in the face of system-wide asset quality problems, related to some extent to the concentration of oil/gas exposures.  Moving forward, profitability can strengthen with improving asset quality though the recent plunge in oil prices represents a threat to this de-risking process. A plus point is the vibrant income streams from e-business and insurance growth drivers.

The operating environment in Nigerian remains challenging: while the country has emerged from a recession, vulnerabilities remain. Lower oil prices, tighter external market conditions, heightened security issues, and delayed policy responses are the main downside risks. The recent fall in oil prices is a concern given Nigeria’s dependency on the commodity and its knock-on effect to the hydrocarbon-exposed Banking System. Although access to foreign currency has eased, due to FX reforms, many borrowers retain limited capacity to service obligations and there are modest opportunities for banks to grow their loan portfolios.  

FBN is thus somewhat of a contrarian call given the weakness in the oil market. But one should buy a hydrocarbon “play” when prices are low, not high. Shares trade at a 60% discount to Book Value and stand on a low Mkt Cap./Deposits rating of 8%, far below the global and EM median. FBN commands a dividend-adjusted PEG of 1.3x. Dividend and earnings yields are 3.3% and 15%, respectively.  A quintile 1 PH Score™ of 7.7 captures the valuation dynamic while metric change is satisfactory. Combining franchise valuation and PH Score™, FBN stands in the top quintile of opportunity globally. The asset quality position and interrelated lower profitability vis-a-vis peers is a reason behind FBN’s lower credit rating and relatively low valuation. We are somewhat sceptical that FBN’s underlying creditworthiness and valuation are efficiently evaluated versus more popular counterparts.