With reference to our blog post : DRB-Hicom a Financial Holding Company? dated 8 July 2013. The Edge weekly interview CEO of Bank Muamalat Malaysia Datuk Mohd Redza Shah Abdul Wahid on it 22 July 2013 issue.
The Financial Services Act 2013 affects DRB-Hicom, which would need to aaplu to Bank Negara to be approved as a Financial Holding Companies (FHC), analysts say. But it does not make sense for the group, which is controlled by prominent businessman Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Albukhary, to be a FHC because it is also invloved in other, bigger business like automotive, energy and ports. Bank Muamalat accounts for only a small part of the group's revenue - about 7% last year. Reported The Edge weekly.
According to Syed Mokhtar Albukhary a Biography . Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar have connection with Minister in Datuk Seri Shahidan Kassim (Minister in the Prime Minister's Department) and Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin. The trio know each other when they were nobody. Syed Mokhtar later connected to former Prime Minister Tun Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad. it is not sure whether government would give him special treatment base on the above powerful connection.
DRB-Hicom has attempted thrice to pare down its interest to 40% , to sell its excess stake to Bahrain-base Islamic lender Al Baraka, Bank Islam Malaysia Bhd and Affin Holdings Bhd over 5 years. Reported The Edge weekly.
Mohd redza told The Edge weekly that the group is looking at the best move forward. " I think, in the next couple of months, it'll come back with a proposal."
"we are open to various options because the banking market is saturated, the regulatory complinace costs are getting higher and operation consts are also going up due to high overheads, especially in terms of manpower costs. So, the logical thing to do is a consolidation."
The group is open to a merger with another bank, including Bank Islam, if make sense.
" I guess Bank Islam is one of the option. We're open to any bank that adds value to existing shareholders and the furture of the bank" Mohd Redza told the Edge weekly.
The Star on 15 March 2013 reported that parent to both BIMB and Bank Islam, pilgrim fund Lembaga Tabung Haji is revisiting the idea of a mega Islamic bank involving a merger between BIMB and Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd.
A BIMB-Bank Muamalat merger would put the combined entity ahead of Maybank Islamic Bank, currently the country's largest Islamic bank by assets (97 billion) and Asia-Pacific's largest syariah lender, market watchers said. Bank Muamalat has an asset size of RM21 billion.
DRB-Hicom, as the country's biggest automotive group with over 20 marques such as Proton, Honda and Volkswagen, derives the bulk of its earnings and revenue from this business.
In FY2013 ended March 31, its automotive division accounted for about 77% of totoal group revenue of RM13.13 billion.
According to FSA, a company can propose another company within its corporate group to be approved as a FHC if it can be shown that the proposed company is in a position to have control over a licensed person and its proposed financial group. " You could put another structure in between DRB-Hicom and the bank. You could create an SPV to hold the bank in stead of DRB-Hicom" Says a source.
However, analysts do not believe this option will hold water with Bank Negara, especially since the central bank had wanted the group to reduce it 70% stake to 40% as far back as five years ago.
However, as it is a requirement that unable to fullfill for 5 years and there is no SPV in between DRB-Hicom and Bank Muamalat. Why DRB-Hicom still allowed to increase it gearing to acquired Proton and Pos Malaysia Berhad?
Just on 13 July 2013, DRB-Hicom proposed to acquire the Minister of Finance Inc's entire 96.87 per cent equity interest in Composite Technology Research Malaysia (CTRM) for RM298.26 million. Do you think a potential FHC can increase it gearing before cleaning it own house? Further, DRB-Hicom never clarified on untally figure on analyst's report! Actual gearing and "interest cover" might be higher!
Update : BIMB in RM6.7bil deal
Valuation of UniAsia Life Insurance Bhd on the low side
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Showing posts with label DRB-Hicom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DRB-Hicom. Show all posts
Friday 26 July 2013
Monday 8 July 2013
DRB-Hicom a Financial Holding Company?
The regulatory and supervisory framework of Malaysia has begun a new phase of its development as the Financial Services Act 2013 (FSA) and Islamic Financial Services Act 2013 (IFSA) come into force 1 July 2013.
Under the new FSB, financial groups and companies that owned more than a 50% stake in a financial institution would now be required to register as a financial holding company.
Among organisations that currently own more than a 50% stake in financial institutions are :
DRB-Hicom Bhd, Lembaga Tabung Haji, HLFG, Hong Leong Company (M) Bhd, AKKA Sdn Bhd, Employees Provident Fund and the Malaysian Industrial Development Finance Bhd (MIDF)
However, Maybank Investment Bank Bhd (MIB) stated in the report at the beginning of the year that while DRB-Hicom would be affected under this ruling, it is already in the process of paring its stake in Bank Muamalat down to 40% from 70% . But on March 2013 Affin Holdings Berhad announced that the company had ceased negotiations with Bank Muamalat's shareholders, DRB-Hicom Bhd and Khazanah nasional Berhad.
Excluding DRB-Hicom, MIB in the opinion that capital levels at listed financial holding companies at this juncture appear to be sufficient to meet what is going to be “stricter” capital requirements by the central bank under the new framework.
“At this stage, capital levels at listed financial holding companies appear adequate, at about 8% on average, and we await actual specifics,” MIB said.
Analysts said they believed details of the new framework, including the various capital requirements, would be released within the next few months. “Financial holding companies have been coy about their present capital ratios at the group level, but guidance would suggest a CET1 (common equity Tier 1) ratio of about 8%, which is adequate against the prevailing minimum of 7% by 2019 under Basel III,” MIB noted.
It is interesting to see whether MIB would reach the same conclusion if DRB-Hicom included as a Financial Holding Company.
Alliance Research banking analyst Cheah King Yoong in the opinion that DRB-Hicom could be a Financial Holding company under monitor by Bank Negara.
The question is whether DRB-Hicom can fulfill the capital requirement as a financial Holding company?
DRB-Hicom view as an assets play by analyst. It assets and project included:
Proton’s Shah Alam factory land worth RM1bil (100 hectares at RM100 per sq ft);
·Tebrau land located in Zone E of Iskandar Malaysia worth RM731mil (365 hectares at RM20psf);
·70% stake in Bank Muamalat valued at RM1.5bil (based on 1.4 price to book balue at a 30% discount to its larger rival BIMB), and
·32.2% stake in Pos Malaysia with current market value of RM856mil.
The four assets are collectively worth nearly 75% of DRB-Hicom’s market capitalisation.
DRB-Hicom mainly leveraging on its existing landbanks throughout Malaysia:
Notable "future" projects include Glenmarie Heights in Iskandar Malaysia (gross development value (GDV) of RM5bil), Jalan Tun Razak project (GDV of RM900mil), various Glenmarie projects in Klang Valley (GDV of RM1.6bil) and Hicom-Pegoh Industrial Park (GDV: RM440mil).
Actually, Property division contirbute lowest in revenue and profit at the moment. the biggest contribution are on services (government Concession )
But being a financial holding company is different ball game. Liquidity is more important than assets. No analyst comment whether DRB-Hicom able to fulfill condition as a Financial Holding Company.
Under the new FSB, financial groups and companies that owned more than a 50% stake in a financial institution would now be required to register as a financial holding company.
Among organisations that currently own more than a 50% stake in financial institutions are :
DRB-Hicom Bhd, Lembaga Tabung Haji, HLFG, Hong Leong Company (M) Bhd, AKKA Sdn Bhd, Employees Provident Fund and the Malaysian Industrial Development Finance Bhd (MIDF)
However, Maybank Investment Bank Bhd (MIB) stated in the report at the beginning of the year that while DRB-Hicom would be affected under this ruling, it is already in the process of paring its stake in Bank Muamalat down to 40% from 70% . But on March 2013 Affin Holdings Berhad announced that the company had ceased negotiations with Bank Muamalat's shareholders, DRB-Hicom Bhd and Khazanah nasional Berhad.
Excluding DRB-Hicom, MIB in the opinion that capital levels at listed financial holding companies at this juncture appear to be sufficient to meet what is going to be “stricter” capital requirements by the central bank under the new framework.
“At this stage, capital levels at listed financial holding companies appear adequate, at about 8% on average, and we await actual specifics,” MIB said.
Analysts said they believed details of the new framework, including the various capital requirements, would be released within the next few months. “Financial holding companies have been coy about their present capital ratios at the group level, but guidance would suggest a CET1 (common equity Tier 1) ratio of about 8%, which is adequate against the prevailing minimum of 7% by 2019 under Basel III,” MIB noted.
It is interesting to see whether MIB would reach the same conclusion if DRB-Hicom included as a Financial Holding Company.
Alliance Research banking analyst Cheah King Yoong in the opinion that DRB-Hicom could be a Financial Holding company under monitor by Bank Negara.
The question is whether DRB-Hicom can fulfill the capital requirement as a financial Holding company?
DRB-Hicom view as an assets play by analyst. It assets and project included:
Proton’s Shah Alam factory land worth RM1bil (100 hectares at RM100 per sq ft);
·Tebrau land located in Zone E of Iskandar Malaysia worth RM731mil (365 hectares at RM20psf);
·70% stake in Bank Muamalat valued at RM1.5bil (based on 1.4 price to book balue at a 30% discount to its larger rival BIMB), and
·32.2% stake in Pos Malaysia with current market value of RM856mil.
The four assets are collectively worth nearly 75% of DRB-Hicom’s market capitalisation.
DRB-Hicom mainly leveraging on its existing landbanks throughout Malaysia:
Notable "future" projects include Glenmarie Heights in Iskandar Malaysia (gross development value (GDV) of RM5bil), Jalan Tun Razak project (GDV of RM900mil), various Glenmarie projects in Klang Valley (GDV of RM1.6bil) and Hicom-Pegoh Industrial Park (GDV: RM440mil).
Actually, Property division contirbute lowest in revenue and profit at the moment. the biggest contribution are on services (government Concession )
But being a financial holding company is different ball game. Liquidity is more important than assets. No analyst comment whether DRB-Hicom able to fulfill condition as a Financial Holding Company.
According to AmResearch published on 11 Jun 2013 : The group has stepped up its gearing pursuant to the acquisition of Proton Holdings Bhd and Pos Malaysia Bhd before that.
DRB-Hicom’s gross gearing ratio now stands at 0.9x. The group says it would still be in a comfortable position with a gross gearing ratio of 1x.
As at 31 March 2013, it was at a net debt position (-RM484mil), with a net debt:equity ratio of only 0.07x. vs. a net cash position (+RM1.85bil) a year earlier.
DRB-Hicom group foresees a capex totalling RM3.2bil over the next couple of years – comprising investments in the auto (80%), services (17%) and PAC (3%).
DRB-Hicom net interest expenses alone for Year ended 2013 amounted to RM242.3million and it interest cover is 2.6. How much interest you paid for your credit card yearly, even including your interest on car and housing loan?
Would Bank Negara give special treatment to DRB-Hicom?
Update : Sorry to informed that all the above figure from Amresearch report appear wrong. According to quarterly report of DRB-Hicom. Interest expenses for DRB-Hicom for Year Ended 2013 amounted to RM337.6million in stead of RM242.3 million above. Thus, it interest cover by Amresearch also appear wrong.
Update :DRB-Hicom Net profit dropped 68.5% in Q1
Update : Sorry to informed that all the above figure from Amresearch report appear wrong. According to quarterly report of DRB-Hicom. Interest expenses for DRB-Hicom for Year Ended 2013 amounted to RM337.6million in stead of RM242.3 million above. Thus, it interest cover by Amresearch also appear wrong.
Update :DRB-Hicom Net profit dropped 68.5% in Q1
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