India

Brief India: Singtel’s Weak 3Q18 Results but Dividend Looks Sustainable and Long Term Upside from Associates and more

In this briefing:

  1. Singtel’s Weak 3Q18 Results but Dividend Looks Sustainable and Long Term Upside from Associates
  2. Yes Bank: In the Cross Hairs of the Regulator

1. Singtel’s Weak 3Q18 Results but Dividend Looks Sustainable and Long Term Upside from Associates

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Singtel (ST SP) recent 3Q18 results were relatively lackluster. Singapore revenue trends were encouraging, but EBITDA remains under pressure esp in the Enterprise segment. Optus saw good net subscriber additions, but this came at a cost – lower ARPU and mobile service revenue (MSR). We have lowered our forecast to reflect pressure on EBITDA and continued losses in Group Digital Life (GDL) but maintain a BUY on the stock with a target price of S$4.00. The near 6% dividend yield is the key support and we believe it can continue to be paid without resorting to increased leverage. Longer term, the fate of key associates (India and Indonesia in particular) are key to the stock’s performance

2. Yes Bank: In the Cross Hairs of the Regulator

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Yes Bank is in the cross hairs of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the banking regulator. On February 13, 2019, the bank issued a press release stating that the regulator’s risk assessment report (RAR) for the year ended March 31, 2018 revealed nil divergence, i.e. the bank’s net profits and asset quality were in conformity with the regulatory norms, unlike in FY2016 and FY2017. However, on February 15, 2019, the bank released a note stating that the RBI had pulled up the bank, as publicly disclosing a part of the RAR breaches regulatory confidentiality and is in violation of regulatory guidelines. While the RAR is indeed confidential, the RBI did not publicly admonish other banks like HDFC Bank, Axis Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank (KMB) when they had publicly revealed nil divergence from their RARs. It is apparent that Yes Bank is the bad boy in the eyes of the regulator, and the bank will have to renew its efforts to change that perception. Shareholders have to therefore exercise caution and take the surge in the share price with a pinch of salt.

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