Daily BriefsFinancials

Daily Brief Financials: Jinke Smart Services, Bank Negara Indonesia Persero, Agile Property Holdings, China SCE, HSBC Holdings and more

In today’s briefing:

  • (Mostly) Asia M&A: September 2022 Roundup
  • Bank Negara Indonesia (BBNI IJ) – More Than Meets the Eye
  • Chinese Property Weekly – 30 September 2022 – Lucror Analytics
  • China SCE – Tear Sheet – Lucror Analytics
  • Financial Sector Now Under Purview of EU’s Pending Forest-Risk Commodity Laws

(Mostly) Asia M&A: September 2022 Roundup

By David Blennerhassett

  • For the month of September, 11 new deals (firm and non-binding) were discussed on Smartkarma with an overall announced deal size of ~US$3bn.
  • The average premium for the new deals announced (or first discussed) in September was ~40%, and a year-to-date average of 39%.
  • This compares to the average premium for all deals in 2021 (165 deals), 2020 (158 deals), and 2019 (145 deals) of 33%, 31%, and 31.5% respectively.

Bank Negara Indonesia (BBNI IJ) – More Than Meets the Eye

By Angus Mackintosh

  • Bank Negara Indonesia (BBNI IJ) remains the laggard amongst the top four Indonesian banks but we see this as unjustified given improving returns and falling credit costs.
  • The bank continues to focus on top-tier corporate clients and large commercial clients plus growing subsidized KUR loans as well as expanding mortgages and payroll loans in the consumer segment.  
  • Bank Negara Indonesia continues to improve returns with its ROE back to 15% in 1H2022 and it trades on 1.2x FY2022 PBV. The bank will benefit from rising interest rates.

Chinese Property Weekly – 30 September 2022 – Lucror Analytics

By Charles Macgregor

The Chinese Property Weekly focuses on providing updates in the Chinese real-estate sector, including recent regulatory and company developments, top and bottom performers, rating actions, as well as a list of bond maturities in the next 30 days.


China SCE – Tear Sheet – Lucror Analytics

By Shu Hui Woon

We view China SCE as “High Risk” on the LARA scale. Our assessment reflects the risks stemming from the company’s fluctuating performance and high financial leverage. SCE specialises in mid-range and high-end residential properties. It has an established presence in Quanzhou and Xiamen, which are both economically vibrant markets with high growth potential. The company has also been diversifying outside Fujian, with the Yangtze River Delta region now its largest contributor in terms of contracted sales.

The bulk of the land bank is located in Tier 1 and 2 cities, which will likely see a rebound when the industry recovers. We like SCE’s diversification and geographical coverage, but remain concerned about execution risks amid the competitive operating environment. Separately, the company’s use of co-operative projects (significant use of JVs and material minority interest) points to off-balance-sheet debt, which would in turn suggest poor corporate governance.

Our fundamental Credit Bias on SCE is “Negative” on account of the weak contracted sales, declining liquidity and weakened credit metrics amid the industry downturn. The company also faces heightened refinancing risk for its upcoming debt, while access to onshore funding remains uncertain. Moreover, the company’s increased dependency on secured borrowings to raise funds will reduce its financial flexibility. That said, SCE intends to dispose of assets to raise cash, which could temporarily alleviate the liquidity pressure. Its land bank includes land in upper-tier cities, where economic fundamentals might be stronger and sales should rebound once the operating conditions improve.

Controversies are “Immaterial” despite reputational risk on account of the increasing number of property-quality related disputes with customers. The ESG Impact on Credit is “Neutral”. We note positively the company’s willingness to honour debt obligations.


Financial Sector Now Under Purview of EU’s Pending Forest-Risk Commodity Laws

By Kyle Rudden

  • A recently-published Insight discussed new supply-chain deforestation regulations and related  risks from the perspective of commodity-related companies (e.g., producers, manufacturers).
  • Whilst that report mentioned recent developments regarding EU legislation (e.g., the addition of rubber to its forest-risk commodities), one major developement deserves more attention.
  • Hence, this follow-up Insight about the EU’s addition of financial institutions (banks, investors, and insurance) to the purview of its pending forest-risk regulations, and associated risks.

💡 Before it’s here, it’s on Smartkarma

Sign Up for Free

The Smartkarma Preview Pass is your entry to the Independent Investment Research Network

  • ✓ Unlimited Research Summaries
  • ✓ Personalised Alerts
  • ✓ Custom Watchlists
  • ✓ Company Data and News
  • ✓ Events & Webinars