Fundamental Analysis of PNB Ltd.
Fundamental Analysis of PNB Ltd.
Fundamental Analysis of PNB Ltd.
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS ON
PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK LIMITED
Punjab National Bank is one of the Big Four Banks of India, along with ICICI Bank, State Bank of
India and Canara Bank.
Punjab National Bank offers financial solutions and services in an array of sectors. All these services
that are offered keep pace with the changing market trends in order to fulfill the needs and
preferences of the customers. Some of the well known sectors on which the main functions of the
bank are based are:
Personal Banking
Corporate Banking
Agriculture finance services
Industrial finance services
Trade financial services
International banking services
PNB also has commercial relationship with more than 200 prestigious international banks across the
globe. It has the provisions of Rupee Drawing Arrangements with around 15 exchange companies in
the UAE and 1 in Singapore.
In case of the personal banking segment, the bank offers customized solutions to take care of almost
all financial needs of the customers. Some of the well known services that are offered in the bank
are:
Punjab National Bank is also a well known name in housing loan benefits. The bank offers both
short term and long term loans. The rates are also affordable and can be paid within a particular time.
The PNB Housing Finance sanctions around 80% of the cost of the project. However, the maximum
amount is around Rs 50 lakh. The interest of the loan is based on the reducing balance and the
principal amount of the loan is also based on the repaying capability of the borrower.
PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK LIMITED
------------------- in ` Cr. -------------------
BALANCE SHEET
Mar '06 Mar '07 Mar '08 Mar '09 Mar '10
12 mths 12 mths 12 mths 12 mths 12 mths
CAPITAL AND LIABILITIES:
Total Share Capital 315.30 315.30 315.30 315.30 315.30
Equity Share Capital 315.30 315.30 315.30 315.30 315.30
Share Application Money 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Preference Share Capital 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Reserves 8,758.68 9,826.31 10,467.35 12,824.59 15,915.63
Revaluation Reserves 302.38 293.85 1,535.70 1,513.74 1,491.99
Net Worth 9,376.36 10,435.46 12,318.35 14,653.63 17,722.92
Deposits 119,684.92 139,859.67 166,457.23 209,760.50 249,329.80
Borrowings 6,687.18 1,948.86 5,446.56 4,374.36 19,262.37
Total Debt 126,372.10 141,808.53 171,903.79 214,134.86 268,592.17
Other Liabilities & Provisions 9,518.93 10,178.51 14,798.23 18,130.13 10,317.69
Total Liabilities 145,267.39 162,422.50 199,020.37 246,918.62 296,632.78
Mar '06 Mar '07 Mar '08 Mar '09 Mar '10
Mar '06 Mar '07 Mar '08 Mar '09 Mar '10
Sales Turnover 9,584.15 11,537.48 14,265.02 19,326.16 21,466.91
Other Income 1,231.16 1,042.30 1,997.56 2,919.69 3,412.49
Total Income 10,815.31 12,579.78 16,262.58 22,245.85 24,879.40
Total Expenses 3,863.09 4,387.74 4,235.81 5,183.63 6,183.42
Operating Profit 5,721.06 7,149.74 10,029.21 14,142.53 15,283.49
Profit On Sale Of Assets -- -- -- -- --
Profit On Sale Of Investments -- -- -- -- --
Gain/Loss On Foreign Exchange -- -- -- -- --
VRS Adjustment -- -- -- -- --
Other Extraordinary
-- -- -- -- --
Income/Expenses
Total Extraordinary
-- -- -- -- 152.82
Income/Expenses
Tax On Extraordinary Items -- -- -- -- --
Net Extra Ordinary
-- -- -- -- --
Income/Expenses
Gross Profit 6,952.22 8,192.04 12,026.77 17,062.22 18,695.98
Interest 4,917.39 6,022.91 8,730.86 12,295.30 12,944.02
PBDT 2,034.83 2,169.13 3,295.91 4,766.92 5,904.78
Depreciation -- -- -- -- --
Depreciation On Revaluation Of
-- -- -- -- --
Assets
PBT 2,034.83 2,169.13 3,295.91 4,766.92 5,904.78
Tax 595.52 629.05 1,247.15 1,676.04 1,999.43
Net Profit 1,439.31 1,540.08 2,048.76 3,090.88 3,905.35
Prior Years Income/Expenses -- -- -- -- --
Depreciation for Previous Years
-- -- -- -- --
Written Back/ Provided
Dividend -- -- -- -- --
Dividend Tax -- -- -- -- --
Dividend (%) -- -- -- -- --
Earnings Per Share 45.65 48.84 64.98 98.03 123.86
Book Value -- -- -- -- --
Equity 315.30 315.30 315.30 315.30 315.30
Reserves 8,758.68 9,826.31 10,467.35 12,824.59 15,915.62
Face Value 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00
GRAPHICAL REPRESENTATION (INCOME STATEMENT)
Operating Results
30,000.00
25,000.00
20,000.00
in ` crores
Total Income
15,000.00 Total expenditure
PBT
10,000.00
PAT
5,000.00
0.00
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Balance Sheet
3,50,000.00
3,00,000.00
2,50,000.00
Total Assets
in ` crores
2,00,000.00
Investments
50,000.00
0.00
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Income Statement
30,000.00
25,000.00
20,000.00
in ` crores
Total Income
15,000.00
Total Expenditure
10,000.00 Net Profit after Tax
5,000.00
0.00
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
3,00,000.00
2,50,000.00
in ` crores
50,000.00
0.00
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Mar '06 Mar '07 Mar '08 Mar '09 Mar '10
Investment Valuation Ratios
Face Value 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00
Dividend Per Share 6.00 10.00 10.00 20.00 22.00
Operating Profit Per Share (Rs) 57.00 74.53 109.81 151.48 191.63
Net Operating Profit Per Share
310.53 383.89 505.09 694.81 777.82
(Rs)
Free Reserves Per Share (Rs) 69.61 64.29 63.79 64.04 63.79
Bonus in Equity Capital -- -- -- -- --
Profitability Ratios
Interest Spread 3.94 4.40 4.18 4.18 4.46
Profit before taxes to total income 18.81 17.24 20.27 21.43 23.73
(%)
Profit after tax to total income 13.30 12.24 12.60 13.89 15.69
Return on Net Worth (Equity)(%) 17.01 16.03 19.00 23.52 24.06
Adjusted Return on Net Worth(%) 15.83 15.17 18.99 23.50 24.04
Leverage Ratios
Current Ratio 0.03 0.03 0.02 0.02 0.02
Quick Ratio 10.69 11.10 9.40 9.75 20.47
Mar '06 Mar '07 Mar '08 Mar '09 Mar '10
Earnings Per Share 45.65 48.84 64.98 98.03 123.86
Book Value 287.79 321.65 341.98 416.74 514.77
Interest Spread:
Net interest spread refers to the difference in borrowing and lending rates of financial institutions
(such as banks) in nominal terms. It is considered analogous to the gross margin of non-financial
companies. Net interest spread is expressed as interest yield on earning assets (any asset, such as a
loan, that generates interest income) minus interest rates paid on borrowed funds.
In simple terms, the net interest spread is like a profit margin. The greater the spread, the more
profitable the financial institution is likely to be; the lower the spread, the less profitable the
institution is likely to be. While the federal funds rate plays a large role in determining the rate at
which an institution lends immediate funds, open market activities ultimately shape the rate spread.
Calculation: A bank takes deposits from customers and pays 1% to those customers. The bank lends its
customers money at 6%. The bank's net interest spread is 5%.
Interest Spread
5
4
percentage
2 Interest Spread
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
20
percentage
15
Profit before taxes to Total
10 Income
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
1.5
1.45
Times
1.35
1.3
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Profit after tax to Total Income:
This ratio analysis tells profitability of a firm after paying all the taxes to total income. The total
income increased by 130.03% from year 2006 to 2010 whereas the total expenditure rose by 60.06%
only from year 2006 to 2010 and the taxes increased by 235.74% from year 2006 to 2010.
Due to the comparative higher growth in the Income level of the PNB Ltd the PAT to Total Income
ratio keeps on increasing after year 2007.
15
percentage
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
This ratio is used to protect depositors and promote the stability and efficiency of financial systems
around the world. Two types of capital are measured: tier one capital, which can absorb losses
without a bank being required to cease trading, and tier two capital, which can absorb losses in the
event of a winding-up and so provides a lesser degree of protection to depositors.
There are several variations on the formula that investors may use:
1. Investors wishing to see the return on common equity may modify the formula above by
subtracting preferred dividends from net income and subtracting preferred equity from shareholders'
equity, giving the following: return on common equity (ROCE) = net income - preferred dividends /
common equity.
2. Return on equity may also be calculated by dividing net income by average shareholders' equity.
Average shareholders' equity is calculated by adding the shareholders' equity at the beginning of a
period to the shareholders' equity at period's end and dividing the result by two.
3. Investors may also calculate the change in ROE for a period by first using the shareholders' equity
figure from the beginning of a period as a denominator to determine the beginning ROE. Then, the
end-of-period shareholders' equity can be used as the denominator to determine the ending ROE.
Calculating both beginning and ending ROEs allows an investor to determine the change in
profitability over the period.
25
20
15
Return on Equity (Net worth)
10
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Sometimes only interest-bearing, long-term debt is used instead of total liabilities in the calculation.
A high debt/equity ratio generally means that a company has been aggressive in financing its growth
with debt. This can result in volatile earnings as a result of the additional interest expense.
If a lot of debt is used to finance increased operations (high debt to equity), the company could
potentially generate more earnings than it would have without this outside financing. If this were to
increase earnings by a greater amount than the debt cost (interest), then the shareholders benefit
as more earnings are being spread among the same amount of shareholders. However, the cost of this
debt financing may outweigh the return that the company generates on the debt through investment
and business activities and become too much for the company to handle. This can lead to
bankruptcy, which would leave shareholders with nothing.
The debt/equity ratio also depends on the industry in which the company operates. For example,
capital-intensive industries such as auto manufacturing tend to have a debt/equity ratio above 2,
while personal computer companies have a debt/equity of under 0.5.
(LOSSES)
PNB Ltd touched 52 weeks low on 30th June 2008. It dipped to ` 372.50. The RBI hiked its CRR,
Repo Rate that impacted the market in a big way but the various expert foresee growths in future.
In the same financial year, the PNB Ltd dipped to ` 287. The market crashed on the 5th March 2009
because of heavy selling pressure. The crash effected the ‘A’ Group 42 stocks including PNB Ltd. It
was the lowest closing for the Sensex since Nov 2005. The Nifty closed below 2600. During this
free fall ‘A’ group 42 stocks have touched in their 52-week lows. It includes stocks like Dr Reddys
Labs, HCL Tech, HDFC, HDIL, HUL, ICICI Bank, L&T, PNB, Rel Capital, Reliance Comm,
RNRL and Axis Bank.
All BSE sectoral indices closed in red; BSE bankex, oil & gas, power, FMCG indices were down
between 3-4%. Some selling was also seen in metal, pharma, IT, auto and realty stocks.
Bank - Allahabad Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, IndusInd Bank, IOB, Karnataka Bank, Kotak
Mahindra, PNB, SBI and Axis Bank.
FMCG - HUL has touched a 52 week low of Rs 216.85 and closed at Rs 230.05, down Rs 10.85, or
4.5%.
(GAINS)
The PNB Ltd. Recorded the highest price on its shares on 16th May 2008. The stock price touched
the level of ` 574.80.
The reasons being PNB has announced its FY08 numbers. The Bank has reported Q4 net profit of Rs
544 crore versus Rs 237.7 crore, a growth of 128.86% and net interest income of Rs 1,517 crore
versus Rs 1,423 crore, up by 6.6%. Q4 other income stood at Rs 537.21 crore. NIM was at 3.66%
and CAR at 12.96%. FY08 net profit went up at Rs 2,048 crore from Rs 1,540 crore.
KC Chakrabarty, CMD of Punjab National Bank said today at a press conference that key business
ratios like return on assets was 1.15% versus last year's 1.03%.
He said the bank's annual net profit was Rs 2,048 crore, which he said, was the highest amongst all
nationalised banks.
Stock Performance Chart for the Financial Year 2009-10
In the financial year 2009-10 the PNB Ltd declared dividend twice as on 3rd June 2009 and 4th Feb
2010.
This financial year the PNB Ltd stocks have performed very well. There have been no looking back
after the fall of 2008 stock price. The stock prices grew on a continuous rate.
References
1. http://www.google.co.in
2. http://www.wikipedia.com
3. http://www.moneycontrol.com
4. http://www.business-standard.com
5. http://www.economictimes.com
6. http://www.pnbindia.com
7. http://www.investopedia.com
8. http://www.bseindia.org