How banks profit from building and breaking up companies

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It is a constant dilemma facing companies; do they acquire or shed businesses to boost shareholder returns?

Investment bankers profit every time the answer involves a deal, even if it represents an about-face for the companies.

Plans to break up

Last week’s announcements by General Electric Co, Toshiba Corp and Johnson & Johnson of their plans to break up offer the latest examples of how some companies have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on investment banking fees to bulk up through acquisitions over the years, only to pay more fees to reverse them.

Some of the banks that worked on preparing these spin-offs – Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and UBS Group AG – advised on previous acquisitions that took the companies in an opposite strategic direction.

Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and UBS did not respond to requests for comment.

Corporate break-ups are on the rise amid a growing consensus on Wall Street that companies perform best only if they are focussed on adjacent business areas, as well as increasing pressure from activist hedge funds pushing them in that direction.

Some 42 spin-offs collectively worth over $200 billion have been announced globally so far this year, up from 38 spin-offs worth roughly $90 billion in 2020, according to Dealogic.

Investment banks have collected more than $4.5 billion since2011 advising on spin-off deals globally, according to Dealogic. While this represents less than 2 per cent of what they pocketed from deal fees overall, it is a growing franchise; banks have so far earned over $1 billion on spin-offs globally so far this year, nearly twice what they earned in 2020, according to Refinitiv.

In the case of GE, financial advisors, including Evercore Inc, PJT Partners Inc, Bank of America Corp and Goldman Sachs, each stand to collect tens of millions of dollars from their advisory roles on the company’s break-up, according to estimates from M&A lawyers and bankers.

Goldman Sachs had previously collected nearly $400 million in fees advising the company on acquisitions, divestitures and spin-offs over the years, making it GE’s top advisor based on fees collected, according to Refinitiv.

Industrywide, Goldman Sachs has earned the most in fees from advising on corporate break-ups thus far in 2021, followed by JPMorgan and Lazard Ltd, according to Dealogic.

Outcome of dealmaking

Yet while investment banking fees are secure, the outcome of dealmaking for a company’s shareholders is far from certain. Shares of companies that engaged in acquisitions or divestments have had a mixed track record, often underperforming peers in the last two years, according to Refinitiv.

To be sure, investment bankers argue that some combinations do not make sense for ever. Changes in a company’s technological and competitive landscape or in the attitude of its shareholders can push it to change course.

For example, GE shareholders were initially supportive of its empire-building acquisitions in businesses as diverse as healthcare, credit cards and entertainment, viewing them as diversifying its earnings stream. When some of these businesses started to underperform and GE’s valuation suffered, investors lost faith in the company’s ability to run disparate businesses.

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SBI posts 67% rise in Q2 net to ₹7,627 crore

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Significant improvement in asset quality and lower loan-loss provisions helped State Bank of India  post highest-ever quarterly standalone net profit in the second quarter at ₹ 7,627 crore.

Resolution of the DHFL account, which allowed the  bank to write-back provisions amounting to ₹4,000 crore, also supported SBI’s bottomline.

The net profit in the second  quarter  ended September 30, 2021 was 67 per cent up year-on-year (yoy) vis-a-vis year-ago quarter’s ₹4,574 crore.

Slippages down

Slippages were about 52 per cent lower yoy at ₹4,176 crore in Q2FY22 against ₹15,666 crore in the first quarter (Q1FY22) ended June 30, 2021.

Dinesh Kumar Khara, Chairman, emphasised that the bank could pull back the first quarter’s retail segment slippages.

“This is the reason for the much lower slippages and also the accounts are performing well.

“Also, our ground level forces have also improved collections. Our collection efficiency stands at about 95 per cent,” he said.

The net interest income  was up about 11 per cent yoy to ₹31,184 crore (₹28,181.50 crore in the year-ago quarter).

Other income, including profit/loss on sale of assets, profit/loss on revaluation of investments (net), earnings from foreign exchange and derivative transactions, recoveries from accounts previously written off, dividend income, etc., declined about 4 per cent yoy to ₹8,208 crore (₹8,528 crore).

Loan-loss provisions declined 52 per cent yoy to ₹2,699 crore against ₹5,619 crore.

GNPA position improves

GNPA position improved to 4.90 per cent of gross advances as at September-end 2021 against 5.32 per cent in the preceding quarter.

Net NPAs position too improved to 1.52 per cent of net advances against 1.77 per cent in the preceding quarter.

As at September-end 2021,domestic advances increased about 5 per cent yoy to ₹ 21,56,055 crore. Foreign offices advances were up about 16 per cent yoy to ₹3,74,722 crore.

Within domestic advances, retail personal advances saw a 15 per cent yoy growth; agriculture (about 2 per cent) and SME (about 1 per cent). However, corporate advances de-grew about 4 per cent.

Khara attributed the muted scenario in corporate advances to working-capital limit utilisation continuing to be low.

“However, credit demand appears to be on the rise with increasing economic activities across India. Corporates too have started planning for future investments, which will create demand for credit going forward,” he said, adding that SBI will see an overall credit growth of 9-10 per cent in FY22.

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U GRO Capital Q2 net profit down 80%

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U GRO Capital reported an 80 per cent drop in its net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal at ₹3.37 crore compared to ₹17.17 crore in the same period last fiscal.

For the quarter ended September 30, 2021, its total revenue jumped up by 80.1 per cent to ₹62.7 crore from ₹34.82 crore a year ago.

Net interest income for the second quarter of the fiscal increased by 53 per cent to ₹31.7 crore compared to ₹20.7 crore in the second quarter of last fiscal.

Net interest margin improved 40 basis points Q-o-Q to 7.7 per cent largely due to reduction in the borrowing cost, U GRO Capital said in a statement on Wednesday.

However, total expenses also shot up by 80.1 per cent on a year-on-year basis to ₹57.98 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal.

The total provisioning as of September 2021 was ₹24.2 crore versus the regulatory requirement of ₹22.1 crore.

Disbursements for the quarter grew 139 per cent sequentially to ₹790 crore.

“The company clocked its highest ever disbursements in September 2021 at ₹288 crore,” it added.

“We will carry on the momentum and traction which is now coming because of the infrastructure we have built over last one year and we have a clear path of achieving our mission of serving 10 lakh customers and take one per cent market share of outstanding MSME credit in the country,” said Shachindra Nath, Executive Chairman and Managing Director of U GRO Capital.

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Union Bank of India sees 3-fold jump in net profit to Rs 1,526 cr in Sept quarter, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Nov 2 : State-owned Union Bank of India on Tuesday reported a nearly three-fold jump in its standalone net profit to Rs 1,526.12 crore for the September 2021 quarter. The lender had posted a net profit of Rs 516.62 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year.

Its total income during July-September 2021 rose to Rs 20,683.95 crore as compared with Rs 20,182.62 crore in the year-ago period, the bank said in a regulatory filing.

Provisionings for bad loans and contingencies fell to Rs 3,723.76 crore, against Rs 4,242.45 crore a year ago.

The bank’s asset quality improved with the gross non-performing assets falling to 12.64 per cent of the gross advances by the end of September 2021, from 14.71 per cent by the end of September 2020.

In terms of value, the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) were worth Rs 80,211.73 crore, down from Rs 95,796.90 crore.

However, net NPAs increased slightly to 4.61 per cent (Rs 26,786.42 crore), from 4.13 per cent (Rs 23,894.35 crore) a year ago.

On a consolidated basis, the bank reported a net profit of Rs 1,510.68 crore in July-September 2021, a jump of 183 per cent from Rs 533.87 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Its consolidated total income rose to Rs 21,621.87 crore, from Rs 20,910.91 crore a year ago.

Shares of Union Bank of India on Tuesday closed at Rs 49.40 apiece on the BSE, up 5.89 per cent from the previous close.



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Bank of India Sep Q2 profit soars nearly 100% to ₹1,051 cr

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State-run Bank of India on Tuesday reported nearly 100 per cent jump in its net profit at ₹1,051 crore in quarter ended September 2021.

The bank had posted net profit of ₹526 crore in the same period a year ago.

“Net profit for Q2FY22 stood at ₹1,051 crore, up by 99.89 per cent year-on-year,” the bank said in a regulatory filing.

On a sequential basis, net profit improved by 45.97 per cent from ₹720 crore.

Net interest income (NII) stood at ₹3,523 crore for the quarter Q2FY22. On a sequential basis, it increased by 12.06 per cent from ₹3,144 crore in quarter ended June 2021, the bank said.

Non-interest income increased by 58.71 per cent from a year ago to ₹2,136 crore for Q2FY22 against ₹1,346 crore in Q2FY21.

On the asset front, the bank improved the quality as the gross non-performing assets (NPAs) were down at 12 per cent of the gross advances at end of September 2021 from 13.79 per cent by end of same month a year ago.

Net NPAs too fell to 2.79 per cent from 2.89 per cent.

Bank of India stock traded at ₹62.25 apiece on BSE, up 3.06 per cent from the previous close.

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HDFC reports 31.7% jump in standalone net profit in Q2

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Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC) Ltd on Monday reported a 31.7 per cent jump in its standalone net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal, led by higher dividend income as well as a drop in expenses.

It said that the individual approvals and disbursements grew by 67 per cent and 80 per cent, respectively, during the half-year ended September 30, 2021 compared to the corresponding period in the previous year. “Individual disbursements in the month of October 21 were the highest ever in a non-quarter end month,” it further said.

Spike in total income

For the quarter ended September 30, HDFC had a standalone net profit of ₹3,780.5 compared to ₹2,870.12 crore in the corresponding quarter last fiscal. Its total income increased by 4.2 per cent to ₹12,226.39 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal as against ₹11,732.70 crore in the same period last fiscal.

The net interest income for second quarter of the fiscal rose by 13 per cent to ₹4,108.51 crore from ₹3,646.54 crore a year ago. The net interest margin was 3.6 per cent for the quarter under review as against 3.7 per cent for the first quarter of the fiscal. Dividend income shot up to ₹1,171.26 crore in the July to September 2021 from ₹322.97 crore a year ago.

Home loans demand

“The demand for home loans continues to remain strong. Growth in home loans was seen in both the affordable housing segment as well as in high end properties. The increasing sales momentum and new project launches augurs well for the housing sector,” HDFC said in a statement on Monday.

The collection efficiency for individual loans on a cumulative basis improved to stand at over 98 per cent during the quarter ended September 30. The provisions as at September 30, 2021 stood at ₹13,340 crore

As per regulatory norms, the gross non-performing loans as at September 30, 2021 stood at ₹10,341 crore. This is equivalent to 2 per cent of the loan portfolio compared to 2.24 per cent as on June 30, 2021.

Expected credit loss was ₹452 crore for the second quarter of the fiscal, marginally higher than ₹436 crore a year ago. This was however, a 34.1 per cent drop from the expected credit loss of ₹686 crore as of June 30, 2021.

As at September 30, 2021, loans restructured under the RBI’s resolution framework for Covid-19 related stress (OTR 1 and 2.0) was equivalent to 1.4 per cent of the loan book compared to 0.9 per cent as at June 30, 2021.

Of the loans restructured, 63 per cent are individual loans and 37 per cent are non-individual loans. Of the total restructured loans, 35 per cent is in respect of just one account. Assets under management increased by 10.6 per cent to ₹5.97-lakh crore as of September 30 from ₹5.4-lakh crore a year ago.

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HDFC Q2 net profit up 32%

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Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC) Ltd reported a 31.7 per cent jump in its standalone net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal at ₹3,780.5. Its net profit was ₹2,870.12 crore in the corresponding quarter last fiscal.

The net interest income for the half year ended September 30, 2021 stood at ₹8,255 crore compared to ₹7,039 crore in the previous year, representing a growth of 17 per cent.

The reported Net Interest Margin was 3.6 per cent.

“The demand for home loans continues to remain strong. Growth in home loans was seen in both the affordable housing segment as well as in high end properties. The increasing sales momentum and new project launches augurs well for the housing sector,” HDFC said in a statement on Monday.

During the half-year ended September 30, 2021, individual approvals and disbursements grew by 67 per cent and 80 per cent respectively compared to the corresponding period in the previous yea

Individual disbursements in the month of October 21 were the highest ever in a non-quarter end month, it further said.

The collection efficiency for individual loans on a cumulative basis improved to stand at over 98 per cent during the quarter ended September 30, 2021.

The provisions as at September 30, 2021 stood at ₹13,340 crore

As per regulatory norms, the gross non-performing loans as at September 30, 2021 stood at ₹10,341 crore. This is equivalent to 2 per cent of the loan portfolio compared to 2.24 per cent as on June 30, 2021.

As at September 30, 2021, loans restructured under the RBI’s Resolution Framework for Covid-19 Related Stress (OTR 1 & 2.0) was equivalent to 1.4 per cent of the loan book (as at June 30, 2021: 0.9 per cent of the loan book). Of the loans restructured, 63 per cent are individual loans and 37 per cent are non-individual loans. Of the total restructured loans, 35% is in respect of just one account.

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RBL Bank Q2 net profit down 78.6%

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Private sector lender RBL Bank reported a 78.6 per cent drop in its standalone net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal on the back of higher provisions and lower interest income.

For the quarter ended September 30, 2021, the bank reported standalone net profit of ₹ 30.8 crore as against ₹144.16 crore in the same period last fiscal.

Its net interest income fell by two per cent on a year on year basis to ₹915 crore in the July to September 2021 quarter from ₹932 crore a year ago.

Net interest margin was also lower at 4.06 per cent as on September 30, 2021 from 4.34 per cent a year ago.

However, other income shot up by 42 per cent to ₹593 crore for the second quarter of the fiscal from ₹418 crore in the corresponding quarter last fiscal.

Provisions jumped up by 33.6 per cent to ₹651.49 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal versus ₹487.56 crore a year ago.

Asset quality deteriorated

The bank’s gross non performing assets rose to ₹3,130.93 crore or 5.4 per cent of gross advances as on September 30, 2021 from 3.34 per cent a year ago. Net NPAs also increased to 2.14 per cent of net advances from 1.38 per cent as on September 30, 2020.

“The economic environment is bouncing back strongly as the pace of vaccination quickens in the country. Our bank is also confident of reverting to normalised levels of business, growth and profitability from the current (third) quarter itself and are on track to exit this financial year with strong profitability ratios setting us up well for 2022-23,” said Vishwavir Ahuja, Managing Director and CEO, RBL Bank.

The bank had a provision coverage ratio, excluding technical write-offs, of 61.7 per cent.

It had an exposure of ₹846.61 crore to accounts where it implemented restructuring under the Reserve Bank of India’s Resolution Framework 1.0 and ₹645.47 crore under Resolution Framework 2.0.

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UCO Bank Q2 net zooms 583% to ₹205 crore

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Riding on the back of a higher growth in net interest income and lower provisions, UCO Bank registered nearly 583 per cent rise in net profit at ₹205 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2021, compared with ₹30 crore in the same period last year.

Net interest income (NII) grew by 15 per cent to ₹1,598 crore during the quarter under review, against ₹1,394 crore same period last year.

Provisions during the quarter came down by nearly 22 per cent to ₹1,019 crore (₹1,301 crore).

UCO Bank sees ‘improved investor appetite’

Out of PCA framework

The bank had recently come out of the Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) measure of Reserve Bank of India following the compliance of norms by maintaining minimum regulatory capital, net NPA, and leverage ratio on an ongoing basis.

RBI takes UCO Bank out of PCA framework

The operating profit increased by 24 per cent at ₹1,334 crore (₹1,076 crore).

Gross non-performing asset (NPA) as a percentage of total advances declined to 8.98 per cent (11.62 per cent); while net NPA came down to 3.37 per cent (3.63 per cent).

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IndusInd Bank Q2 net profit up 72%

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Private sector lender IndusInd Bank reported a 72.09 per cent year-on-year jump in standalone net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal, supported by a drop in provisions and a robust net interest income and fee income.

For the quarter ended September 30, 2021, the bank had a standalone net profit of ₹1,113.53 crore, against ₹647.04 crore during the same period last fiscal.

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Net interest income increased by 11.6 per cent to ₹3,658.4 crore (₹3,277.9 crore).

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Net interest margin stood at 4.07 per cent, marginally lower than the 4.16 per cent recorded during the second quarter of 2020-21, mainly due to surplus liquidity placed under repo with RBI.

Other income increased by 18.2 per cent on a year-on-year basis to ₹1,837.2 crore in the July to September 2021 quarter.

Provisions declined by 13.3 per cent to ₹1,703.36 crore, against ₹1,964.4 crore a year ago.

Gross non-performing assets declined sequentially to 2.77 per cent of gross advances as of September 30, 2021, against 2.88 per cent as on June 30, 2021. However, it was higher than the gross NPA level of 2.21 per cent as on September 30, 2020.

Net NPA was 0.8 per cent of net advances as of September 30, 2021, versus 0.52 per cent a year ago.

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