In an equities research note sent to its professional and institutional clients this week, SBG Securities issued a sell recommendation on Standard Bank at a revised target price of R160 per share, up from R155 per share due to higher than expected full year earnings and a lower dividend cover.
For the financial year ended December 31 2016, the banking group reported a 4% increase in headline earnings and headline per share to R23 billion and R14.140 respectively.
A poor performance by insurance arm Liberty Holding’s, which suffered a 46.2% decrease in headline earnings to R2.21 million, weighed on the group as headline earnings attributable to Liberty fell 61% to R955 million.
Following the results announcement, Moneyweb reported that the banking group had devised a “detailed action plan” to turn Liberty around.
Read: Standard Bank prioritises Liberty turnaround
SBG Securities said the “noise around Liberty’s weak earnings performance has masked some troubling trends at Standard Bank”.
It went on to question whether Standard Bank was struggling to understand the needs of retail clients as growth in non-interest revenue (NR) from Personal and Business Banking (PBB) in South Africa increased by 6% relative to an 11% increase in expenses.
Citing a previous report, it said the interest rates offered on savings were kept low despite rising interest rates.
“PBB’s revenue growth has been flattered by endowment and keeping client deposit rates low… Were it not for the mortgage book, Personal Banking’s earnings would not have grown and this weakness is having an impact on the financial results,” the stock brokerage firm said.
The bank’s financial results show that PBB’s mortgage lending headline earnings grew by 20% to R2.97 billion.