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Research: Financials
Secure Trust Bank (STB) reported H122 PBT of £24.7m, including an £8.1m gain on the disposal of its Debt Managers Services (DMS) unit. Reported return on equity (ROE) was 12.5%, and the underlying ROE was 8.3%. Pre-provision operating profit was up 22% y o y driven by a 23% increase in core loans. Underlying earnings were down 52% y-o-y as impairments returned to a normal level (annualised 1.4% of loans in H122) after the unusually large COVID-19 related loan reversals in H121. STB’s capital position remains strong (CET1 14.0%), but we expect the deteriorating UK economic outlook to lead STB to pare down its balance sheet expansion. We are reducing our forecasts to reflect this slowdown: we have cut EPS in FY22e by 6% and FY23e by 12%. Despite the cut, momentum is still good; we forecast a 13% increase in loans in FY23 with a 29% increase in underlying earnings and 11.6% ROE. We have reduced our fair value (FV) from 2,491p to 2,407p, as we have cut our sustainable ROE assumption from 13.5% to 13% due to macro concerns.
Secure Trust Bank |
Solid interim results |
2022 interims |
Banks |
16 August 2022 |
Share price performance
Business description
Next events
Analysts
Secure Trust Bank is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited |
Secure Trust Bank (STB) reported H122 PBT of £24.7m, including an £8.1m gain on the disposal of its Debt Managers Services (DMS) unit. Reported return on equity (ROE) was 12.5%, and the underlying ROE was 8.3%. Pre-provision operating profit was up 22% yoy driven by a 23% increase in core loans. Underlying earnings were down 52% y-o-y as impairments returned to a normal level (annualised 1.4% of loans in H122) after the unusually large COVID-19 related loan reversals in H121. STB’s capital position remains strong (CET1 14.0%), but we expect the deteriorating UK economic outlook to lead STB to pare down its balance sheet expansion. We are reducing our forecasts to reflect this slowdown: we have cut EPS in FY22e by 6% and FY23e by 12%. Despite the cut, momentum is still good; we forecast a 13% increase in loans in FY23 with a 29% increase in underlying earnings and 11.6% ROE. We have reduced our fair value (FV) from 2,491p to 2,407p, as we have cut our sustainable ROE assumption from 13.5% to 13% due to macro concerns.
Year end |
Operating income (£m) |
PBT* |
EPS* |
DPS |
P/E |
Yield |
12/20 |
166.1 |
19.1 |
81.0 |
44.0 |
13.9 |
3.9 |
12/21 |
164.5 |
58.8 |
254.0 |
61.1 |
4.4 |
5.4 |
12/22e |
173.6 |
39.6 |
157.3 |
36.4 |
7.2 |
3.2 |
12/23e |
193.6 |
50.8 |
203.2 |
50.8 |
5.5 |
4.5 |
Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments.
Momentum maintained
The strong loan growth was expected as STB seeks to seize lending opportunities in its niches; one of management’s medium-term targets is a loan CAGR of 15%. Retail finance, vehicle finance and commercial finance all posted year-on-year growth above 30% and asset quality held up. Real estate, which was affected by challenging sector conditions only grew 8%. Interest margin fell from 6.0% in H121 to 5.7%, mostly from retail finance where the loan mix quality improved.
Confidence and caution
Although management is still confident about growth opportunities, it is mindful of the deteriorating economic environment. It has already made some lending adjustments, including tightening criteria in vehicle finance and further raising the weight of investment loans (as opposed to higher-yielding but riskier development loans) of the real estate portfolio. We expect the short duration of its loan book and proven management nimbleness should enable the bank to make further adjustments if lending conditions change, as in proven in the past.
Valuation: Fair value of 2,407p per share
We obtain an FV of 2,407p per share using a net asset value (NAV) approach. We have reduced the sustainable ROE from 13.5% to 13.0%, but maintain a 10% cost of equity (COE) and 2% annual growth. The FV is the present value of the (ROE-g)/(COE-g) formula at end 2022 discounted to FY22. The 2,407p value implies an FY22e P/BV of 1.4x; STB is currently trading on a 0.6x P/BV ratio.
H122: Strong growth while impairments normalise
Core loans grew 23% y-o-y
STB’s reported loan balances grew 15% y-o-y during H122, with the figure being 23% if we include only the core lending niches excluding the businesses sold or exited (DMS, consumer mortgages and asset finance). This fast pace of growth reflects management’s medium-term target of a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15% in its core lending niches and the investments made to position the bank to take advantage of the lending opportunities.
Retail finance and vehicle finance loan balances grew 32% and 37% y-o-y. Commercial finance (invoice discounting) grew 50% y-o-y. In contrast, real estate finance grew less at 8%, affected by the more delicate situation in the real estate sector.
As a small bank, it is easier for STB to gain market share in its niches than larger banks and post such strong growth numbers. Management expects a modest slowdown of growth as the economic downturn gathers pace but notes that the retail lending pipeline remains strong for Q322. STB has already made lending adjustments, including tightening lending criteria in its vehicle finance, while changing its real estate finance mix towards investment (now 88% of all loans) at the expense of the higher-yielding but riskier development loans.
Impairments now normalising
Impairments in H122 came in at an annualised 1.4% of loans and this represents a return to a normal level of impairments. The unusual loan reversions in H121 were large enough to make provisioning expenses negligible in H121 (specifically, there was a net 0.1% of loans). These reversions, which were an industry-wide phenomenon, occurred because asset quality turned out to be much better than initially feared (and provisioned) by the banks in FY20 during the beginning of the pandemic.
STB’s impairments were centred in vehicle finance (annualised 8.0% of loans) and retail finance (1.4% of loans). We note that the vehicle finance provisioning was above average and reflects the fact that the business was paused and restarted; management believes that the cruising speed impairments level will be closer to 5.5% of loans.
DMS and AppToPay deals completed in May
STB completed the sale of DMS to Intrum UK Finance in May 2022 after announcing the deal in April 2022 (see our note from April 2022). This resulted in a pre-tax capital gain of £8.1m, although the company expects there to be some winding down costs relating to the sale in second half of FY22. STB received £81.9m for a loan book of £71.8m (2.6% of the loan book). Direct and indirect costs relating to the sale were £2m.
STB also completed in May the acquisition of AppToPay (announced in November 2021, see our note from November 2021) for £1m. AppToPay will provide the proprietary technology platform to allow STB through its Retail Finance business to enter the regulated buy now, pay later (BNPL) market.
Profit before impairments +22% y-o-y
STB reported an operating profit before impairments on its continuing business of £34.3m, +22% yoy. This was driven by balance sheet expansion and resilient margins. The cost to income dropped from 60% a year ago to 57% (underlying was 55.7% due to a one-off charge in H122 relating to corporate activities), as operating expenses rose by 8% while operating income grew 14%.
The normalisation of impairments resulted in a 42% decline year-on-year in PBT on a continuing basis to £17.1m. The EPS of the continuing operations fell 48% to 67p in H122. This EPS excludes the operations that have been sold and exited – DMS, consumer mortgages and asset finance.
Our underlying EPS only removes the actual capital gain on DMS sale (but keeps the operating contribution). On this basis the underlying EPS fell 52% to 67p (by coincidence the same as the continuing operations EPS).
Reported EPS was 102.4p, down 27% y-o-y and boosted by DMS capital gain. The normalised ROE was 8.3% for H122 and the reported ROE was 12.5%.
The CET1 ratio was 14.0%, helped by the sale of DMS; the balance sheet remains well capitalised.
Exhibit 1: H122 interims – selected numbers
Year end 31 December (£m) |
H121 |
H122 |
% y-o-y |
Net interest income |
65.2 |
73.1 |
12 |
Net fees & commissions |
5.8 |
7.9 |
36 |
Total operating income |
71.0 |
81.0 |
14 |
Total operating expenses |
(42.8) |
(46.2) |
8 |
Loss on derivatives |
0.0 |
(0.5) |
|
Operating profit pre impairments |
28.2 |
34.3 |
22 |
Impairment charges on loans |
0.4 |
(17.9) |
|
Gains on modification of financial assets |
0.7 |
0.7 |
|
PBT continuing operations |
29.3 |
17.1 |
(42) |
Tax |
(4.5) |
(4.2) |
(7) |
PBT - discontinued operations |
1.4 |
7.6 |
|
PBT - total reported |
30.7 |
24.7 |
(20) |
Tax on discontinued operations |
(0.2) |
(1.4) |
|
Net attributable income |
26.0 |
19.1 |
(27) |
|
|
|
|
Reported diluted EPS (p) |
136.8 |
99.1 |
(28) |
Reported diluted EPS (p) of continuing operations |
130.5 |
67.0 |
(48) |
Underlying diluted EPS (p) |
136.8 |
67.0 |
(52) |
Key ratios and balance sheet |
|||
Cost income ratio (%) |
60.3 |
57.0* |
|
NIM (NII/average loans) (%) |
6.0 |
5.7 |
|
Impairment charge % average loans |
0.0 |
1.4 |
|
Impairment charge (incl. loan modification losses) % avg loans |
(0.1) |
1.3 |
|
Loan/deposit ratio (%) |
120.0 |
120.1 |
|
CET1 ratio (%) |
14.1 |
14.0 |
|
ROE% reported (%) |
19.0 |
12.5 |
|
ROE% underlying (%) |
19.0 |
8.3 |
Source: Secure Trust Bank. Note: *The underlying cost to income ratio was 55.7% adjusting for a £1.1m one-off charge.
Exhibit 2: H122 loan balances and impairments
Year end 31 December (£m) |
H121 |
H122 |
% y-o-y |
Real estate finance |
1,056.6 |
1,142.6 |
8 |
Asset finance |
5.8 |
0.0 |
|
Commercial finance |
239.4 |
359.8 |
50 |
Business finance |
1,301.8 |
1,502.4 |
15 |
Vehicle finance |
244.3 |
332.6 |
36 |
Retail finance |
694.3 |
916.2 |
32 |
Debt management services (DMS) |
90.4 |
0.0 |
|
Consumer mortgages |
56.6 |
0.0 |
|
Consumer finance |
1,085.6 |
1,248.8 |
15 |
Other |
2.5 |
0.0 |
|
Total |
2,389.9 |
2,751.2 |
15 |
Total core (ex-DMS, consumer mortgages and asset finance) |
2,237.1 |
2,751.2 |
23 |
Impairments % of average loans |
H121 |
H122 |
|
Real estate finance |
(0.2) |
0.0 |
|
Asset finance |
(2.5) |
||
Commercial finance |
0.0 |
(0.1) |
|
Business finance |
(0.2) |
0.0 |
|
Vehicle finance |
2.8 |
(8.3) |
|
Retail finance |
(0.7) |
(1.4) |
|
Consumer mortgages |
0.0 |
||
Consumer finance |
0.3 |
(3.2) |
|
Other |
30.3 |
||
Total |
0.1 |
(1.4) |
Source: Secure Trust Bank
Adjustments to loan forecasts
We have made changes to our loan growth forecasts, but we still expect double-digit growth for FY22 and FY23. We have adjusted for the sale of DMS, reduced growth in real estate finance and increased our forecasts for the other three core segments.
The net impact of our changes is a reduction in loan growth by 1% and 4% for FY22e and FY23e. Our current forecasts are 16% and 13% y-o-y growth in total loans for FY22e and FY23e. If we exclude DMS in the year-on-year comparison, the loan balance growth would be 20% in FY22e.
Exhibit 3: Loan book balance estimates
£m unless stated |
2019 |
2020 |
2021 |
2022e |
2023e |
Real estate finance |
962 |
1,052 |
1,110 |
1,160 |
1,250 |
Asset finance |
28 |
10 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Commercial finance |
252 |
231 |
313 |
390 |
450 |
Business finance |
1,242 |
1,293 |
1,423 |
1,550 |
1,700 |
Motor finance |
324 |
244 |
263 |
370 |
450 |
Retail finance |
689 |
658 |
765 |
1,010 |
1,150 |
Debt management service (DMS) |
82 |
82 |
80 |
0 |
0 |
Retail mortgages |
106 |
78 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Consumer finance |
1,201 |
1,062 |
1,108 |
1,380 |
1,600 |
Other |
8 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Total lending |
2,450 |
2,359 |
2,531 |
2,930 |
3,300 |
Year-on-year (%) |
|||||
Real estate finance |
25 |
9 |
5 |
5 |
8 |
Commercial finance |
29 |
(8) |
36 |
24 |
15 |
Motor finance |
17 |
(25) |
8 |
41 |
22 |
Retail finance |
15 |
(4) |
16 |
32 |
14 |
Total lending growth |
21 |
(4) |
7 |
16 |
13 |
Total core lending growth |
21 |
(2) |
12 |
20 |
13 |
Source: Secure Trust Bank accounts, Edison Investment Research
Forecasts
The sale of DMS is largely earnings neutral in FY22 and FY23, but resulted in a reduction in revenue and costs. The more defensive loan mix in the real estate finance division and the lower margins in retail finance also contributed to a reduction in net interest forecasts. We are now forecasting 3% and 13% increases in net interest income on a continuing business (ex-DMS) for FY22e and FY23e. We forecast the net interest margin as a percentage of average loans to decline from 6.2% in FY21 to 5.7% in FY22 and remain at this level in FY23.
Exhibit 4: FY22 and FY23 forecasts changes
Operating income (£m) |
Normalised PBT (£m) |
Normalised EPS (p) |
|||||||
Old |
New |
% chg. |
Old |
New |
% chg. |
Old |
New |
% chg. |
|
2022e |
186.5 |
173.6 |
(6.9) |
40.8 |
37.5 |
(9.9) |
167.2 |
157.3 |
(5.9) |
2023e |
215.2 |
193.6 |
(10.0) |
56.4 |
50.8 |
(11.5) |
232.0 |
203.2 |
(12.4) |
Source: Edison Investment Research
Most of the STB’s lending (outside real estate finance) is fixed rate and therefore less interest rate sensitive. However, we would expect STB to pass a good portion of the increase in the funding rate to borrowers.
After the investments made in FY21, which caused the cost to income ratio to increase to 63%, we forecast the cost to income ratio to decline to 58% in FY22e (it was 57% at H122) and then to 52.5% in FY23. This is similar to our previous forecasts of 58% and 53% for FY22e and FY23e. Management maintains its medium-term goal of a cost to income ratio of below 55%.
We have kept the level of impairments about the same (1.3% of loans in FY22e and FY23e) with an increase in our vehicle loan impairments assumption being offset by lower retail finance forecasts. STB’s relatively short loan duration and proven management nimbleness mean that we expect the bank to make changes relatively quickly should lending conditions change. The key risk to earnings is in vehicle loans and retail finance, where the lending risk (and margins) is concentrated.
All of this adds up to 6% and 12% reductions in the normalised EPS for FY22e and FY23e. This represents a 38% EPS decline on FY21 (earnings boosted by COVID-19 related loan reversals) followed by a 29% increase in FY23e. We have stripped from our figures the capital gain from the sale of DMS (£8.1m before tax, £6m after tax). We are forecasting normalised ROEs of 8.9% and 11.6% for FY22e and FY23e. The forecast reported ROE is 10.9% for FY22e.
We expect STB’s balance sheet to remain well capitalised. We estimate a CET1 ratio of 13.7% and 12.9% for FY22e and FY23e; management’s target is to keep the ratio above 12%.
Valuation
We continue to value STB on an NAV approach using the (ROE-g)/(COE-g) formula. We have reduced our assumptions of a sustainable ROE from 13.5% to 13.0% to consider the likely more challenging macro environment in the next couple of years. We maintain our assumptions of a 10% COE and a 2% increase in long-term earnings. The FV of 2,407p is equivalent to a P/BV multiple of 1.38x, compared to the trading FY22e P/BV of 0.64x, suggesting significant upside in our FV.
STB is still trading below its book value despite its track record of value-creating ROEs (ie above its 10% COE) and this in part reflects the market heavily penalising cyclical stocks like financials at a time of heightened economic concerns and uncertainty. We do not envisage any losses at STB that could possibly eat into its book value and capital base.
Exhibit 5: STB valuation (net asset value approach*)
ROE (%) |
13.0 |
||
COE (%) |
10.0 |
||
Long-term growth (%) |
2.0 |
||
Book value/share in FY22e (p) |
1,751 |
||
Indicated fair value for FY22 per share (p) |
2,407 |
||
Fair value of P/BV FY22 (x) |
1.38 |
||
P/BV FY22 (x) |
0.64 |
Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: *(ROE-g)/(COE-g).
Exhibit 6 compares STB’s market multiples with some of its peers. STB is trading at an 11% premium in terms of FY22e P/E to its peers (7.2x vs 6.5x); we remove Metrobank from the average because it is loss making). However, we feel the size of this premium is almost inconsequential as the whole sector is trading at very depressed ratings. STB’s dividend yield is 42% higher than its peers. Its FY22e ROE is 24% below its peers (8.9% vs 11.8%) but it is trading at a wider FY21 P/BV discount of 32%, which is attractive from a valuation point of view.
We continue to see STB as a well-capitalised bank with a good business model that is still intact, and the FY21 results have shown that management seems to have kept a good control on asset quality. We therefore believe that market multiples suggest room for the share price to recover strongly as it starts to move back to a growth stage and earnings growth is boosted as impairments come down.
Exhibit 6: Challenger/specialist lender comparative table
Price |
Market cap |
P/E (x) |
P/E (x) |
Dividend yield (%) |
ROE (%) |
ROE (%) |
P/BV (x) last reported |
||
Secure Trust Bank |
1,125 |
238.8 |
4.4 |
7.2 |
5.4 |
16.5 |
8.9 |
0.71 |
|
Close Brothers |
1,134 |
1,706.2 |
9.2 |
9.5 |
5.3 |
13.9 |
11.4 |
1.09 |
|
CYBG |
154 |
2,207.8 |
4.4 |
4.7 |
0.0 |
15.0 |
9.1 |
0.40 |
|
Metrobank |
91 |
158.7 |
N/A |
N/A |
0.0 |
(15.0) |
(9.6) |
0.15 |
|
OneSavings Bank |
528 |
2,327.1 |
6.8 |
6.3 |
4.9 |
18.7 |
19.5 |
1.17 |
|
Paragon |
554 |
1,335.1 |
9.9 |
8.2 |
4.7 |
10.3 |
0.0 |
1.12 |
|
S&U |
2,140 |
261.9 |
9.3 |
3.6 |
4.2 |
8.1 |
18.9 |
1.44 |
|
Average ex-Metrobank |
7.9 |
6.5 |
3.8 |
13.2 |
11.8 |
1.0 |
|||
STB versus average ex-Metrobank (%) |
(44) |
11 |
42 |
25 |
(24) |
(32) |
Source: Refinitiv, Edison Investment Research. Note: Priced at 5 August 2022.
Exhibit 7: Recent share price performance in a peer group context, %
1 month |
3 months |
1 year |
YTD |
From 12m high |
|
Secure Trust Bank |
(1.5) |
(3.8) |
6.7 |
(3.8) |
(9.9) |
Close Brothers |
14.9 |
7.3 |
(28.0) |
(19.2) |
(30.6) |
Virgin Money |
16.9 |
(3.7) |
(23.4) |
(13.5) |
(29.7 |
Metrobank |
20.7 |
7.4 |
(7.5) |
(4.9) |
(38.2) |
OneSavings Bank |
14.1 |
(3.6) |
8.4 |
(4.8) |
(13.2) |
Paragon |
14.7 |
12.2 |
(0.8) |
(2.2) |
(10.5) |
S&U |
4.4 |
(8.9) |
(23.3) |
(20.7) |
(27.5) |
Average |
14.3 |
1.8 |
(12.4) |
(10.9) |
(24.9) |
STB versus average |
(16) |
(6) |
19 |
7 |
15 |
Source: Refinitiv, Edison Investment Research. Note: Priced at 5 August 2022
Exhibit 8: Financial summary
Year end 31 December |
2020 |
2021 |
2022e |
2023e |
£m except where stated |
||||
Profit and loss |
||||
Net interest income |
150.9 |
150.8 |
155.6 |
176.5 |
Net commission income |
15.2 |
13.7 |
17.9 |
17.1 |
Total operating income |
166.1 |
164.5 |
173.6 |
193.6 |
Total G&A expenses (exc non-recurring items below) |
(92.6) |
(104.0) |
(100.8) |
(101.6) |
Operating profit pre impairments & exceptionals |
73.5 |
60.5 |
72.8 |
92.0 |
Impairment charges on loans |
(51.3) |
(4.5) |
(36.1) |
(41.2) |
Losses on modification of financial assets |
(3.1) |
1.5 |
0.7 |
0.0 |
Other income |
0.0 |
(0.1) |
0.0 |
0.0 |
PBT before non-recurring |
19.1 |
57.4 |
37.3 |
50.8 |
Non-recurring items |
0.0 |
(1.5) |
(0.5) |
0.0 |
PBT continuing operations |
19.1 |
55.9 |
36.8 |
50.8 |
Corporation taxes |
(3.7) |
(10.4) |
(8.7) |
(11.7) |
Tax rate |
19.4% |
18.6% |
23.7% |
23.0% |
Profit after tax - continuing basis |
15.4 |
45.5 |
28.1 |
39.1 |
PBT - discontinued businesses |
0.0 |
1.4 |
7.6 |
0.0 |
Tax on discontinued businesses |
0.0 |
0.0 |
(1.4) |
0.0 |
Profit after tax - total reported |
15.4 |
46.9 |
34.3 |
39.1 |
Minority interests |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Net attributable income - reported |
15.4 |
46.9 |
34.3 |
39.1 |
PBT - total reported underlying |
19.1 |
58.8 |
39.6 |
50.8 |
Net attributable income underlying |
15.4 |
48.4 |
30.3 |
39.1 |
Average basic number of shares in issue (m) |
18.6 |
18.6 |
18.6 |
18.6 |
Average diluted number of shares in issue (m) |
19.0 |
19.1 |
19.3 |
19.3 |
Reported diluted EPS (p) |
81.0 |
239.4 |
145.8 |
203.2 |
Underlying diluted EPS (p) |
81.0 |
254.0 |
157.3 |
203.2 |
Ordinary DPS (p) |
44.0 |
61.1 |
36.4 |
50.8 |
Special DPS (p) |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Net interest/average loans |
6.32% |
6.17% |
5.70% |
5.67% |
Impairments incl losses on loan modifications /average loans |
2.28% |
0.12% |
1.30% |
1.32% |
Cost income ratio |
55.7% |
63.2% |
58.1% |
52.5% |
Balance sheet |
||||
Net customer loans |
2,358.9 |
2,530.6 |
2,930.0 |
3,300.0 |
Other assets |
302.3 |
355.3 |
399.5 |
428.8 |
Total assets |
2,661.2 |
2,885.9 |
3,329.5 |
3,728.8 |
Total customer deposits |
1,992.5 |
2,103.2 |
2,441.7 |
2,750.0 |
Other liabilities |
401.1 |
480.3 |
561.4 |
628.5 |
Total liabilities |
2,393.6 |
2,583.5 |
3,003.1 |
3,378.5 |
Net assets |
267.6 |
302.4 |
326.5 |
350.3 |
Minorities |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Shareholders' equity |
267.6 |
302.4 |
326.5 |
350.3 |
Reconciliation of movement in equity |
||||
Opening shareholders' equity |
252.0 |
267.6 |
302.4 |
320.7 |
Equity restatement adjustment |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Profit in period |
15.4 |
45.6 |
28.1 |
39.1 |
Other comprehensive income |
(0.2) |
0.1 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Ordinary dividends |
0.0 |
(11.9) |
(10.8) |
(9.5) |
Special dividend |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Share based payments |
(0.7) |
1.0 |
1.0 |
0.0 |
Issue of shares |
1.1 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Share issuance costs |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
Closing shareholders' equity |
267.6 |
302.4 |
320.7 |
350.3 |
Other selected data and ratios |
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Period end shares in issue (m) |
18.6 |
18.6 |
18.6 |
18.6 |
NAV per share (p) |
1,436 |
1,622 |
1,751 |
1,879 |
Tangible NAV per share (p) |
1,395 |
1,585 |
1,718 |
1,846 |
Return on average equity (normalised) |
5.9% |
16.0% |
8.9% |
11.6% |
Return on average TNAV |
6.4% |
18.9% |
10.8% |
14.4% |
Average loans |
2,389.0 |
2,444.8 |
2,730.3 |
3,115.0 |
Average deposits |
2,010.3 |
2,002.8 |
2,272.4 |
2,595.8 |
Loans/deposits |
118.4% |
120.3% |
120.0% |
120.0% |
Risk exposure |
1,999.7 |
2,087.4 |
2,313.5 |
2,605.3 |
Common equity tier 1 ratio |
14.0% |
14.5% |
13.7% |
12.9% |
Source: Secure Trust Bank, Edison Investment Research
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Research: Investment Companies
Utilico Emerging Markets Trust (UEM) is managed by Charles Jillings at value-focused investment firm ICM Group. He says that the trust’s high- conviction, differentiated portfolio offers exposure to attractive long-term investment opportunities. More than 95% of the fund is invested in operational assets, and greater than 90% is held in listed securities. UEM’s portfolio companies have long-term assets and most of them have established regulatory frameworks. The manager stresses the importance of site visits and meeting with local employees to gain a deeper understanding of investee companies and the quality of their management teams. UEM’s dividend is more than fully covered by portfolio income and the trust offers an attractive 3.7% yield.
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