After a 63% rebound from its March
low, HDFC Bank's stock is too expensive given the risks related to management
change and asset quality
Pankaj Agarwal has
mostly stuck to his sell rating on HDFC Bank Ltd. for six years, during which
the lender’s stock has tripled in value, turning it into India’s biggest by
market capitalisation.
Yet investors who followed Agarwal’s recommendations over the past 12 months
have yielded a 36% return, the most among more than 40 analysts covering the
stock.
After a 63%
rebound from its March low, HDFC
Bank’s stock is too expensive given the risks related to management change
and asset quality, as Indian lenders face “one of the most challenging phases”
amid Covid-19 and the nation’s prolonged credit crisis, Agarwal, an analyst at
Ambit Capital Pvt, said in an interview. He has had a sell rating on HDFC Bank
since 2014 save a brief upgrade to buy earlier this year, Bloomberg-compiled
data show.
Bank
stocks have been the worst-performers in India this year, with a gauge of
lenders slumping more than 24%. Soured loans are expected to swell to the
highest level in more than two decades in 2021 following the world’s strictest
lockdown measures.
HDFC Bank posted
profit for the September-ended quarter that beat the average analyst estimate
by 17%. Its gross bad-loan ratio narrowed, but that was thanks to regulatory
exemptions that make it difficult to read asset quality trends, Agarwal said.
India’s largest
private lender is trading at 3.5 times book value, more than double the
valuation of any other bank globally with a market cap of over $50 billion. The
stock is down just 2% this year, outperforming all of its peers on the S&P
BSE Bankex Index. But investors are missing the point, according to Agarwal.
Returns based on
analyst recommendations are calculated assuming that each independent
recommendation change is a new investment of equal size. All positive analyst
ratings are mapped to an equally-sized long positions in the security and all
negative ratings are mapped to equally-sized short positions in the security.
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