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home / news releases / BPIRF - Piraeus Financial Holdings S.A. (BPIRY) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript


BPIRF - Piraeus Financial Holdings S.A. (BPIRY) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript

2023-11-03 15:53:13 ET

Piraeus Financial Holdings S.A. (BPIRY)

Q3 2023 Earnings Conference Call

November 3, 2023 09:00 ET

Company Participants

Christos Megalou - Chief Executive Officer

Theo Gnardellis - Chief Financial Officer

Chryssanthi Berbati - Head, Business Planning, IR & ESG

Xenofon Damalas - Investor Relations Officer

Conference Call Participants

Butkov Mikhail - Goldman Sachs

Ismailou Eleni - AXIA Ventures

Goodacre Sam - JPMorgan

Daniel David - Autonomous Research

Osman Memisoglu - Ambrosia Capital

Nigro Alberto - Mediobanca

Presentation

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. I am Koby, your Chorus Call operator. Welcome and thank you for joining the Piraeus Financial Holdings Conference Call and Live Webcast to present and discuss Piraeus Nine Months 2023 Financial Results. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Piraeus Financial Holdings CEO, Mr. Christos Megalou. Mr. Megalou, you may now proceed.

Christos Megalou

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen and welcome to today’s conference call on our nine months 2023 financial results. This is Christos Megalou, Chief Executive Officer of Piraeus Group. And I am joined today by our CFO, Theo Gnardellis; Chryssanthi Berbati; and Xenofon Damalas.

Piraeus Bank’s strong operating performance in the nine months 2023 period confirms that we are well on track to meet or surpass our targets. In the third quarter 2023, we have delivered yet another quarter of solid results, maintaining our focus on net revenue growth and operational excellence.

Before diving into the details of the bank’s performance, I would like to comment on the macroeconomic environment. In 2023, the Greek economy maintains its growth momentum, with first half real GDP increasing by 2.4% annually, higher than the Eurozone average of 0.9%. The recent announcement that the Greek sovereign has regained its investment grade status marks another milestone for the country and the banking sector in the journey of convergence with the European Union.

Let’s start our presentation with Slide 5, which displays our impressive performance in the third quarter and nine month 2023 period. Third quarter profit increased strongly continuing the positive trends of previous quarters supported by top line overperformance, improved efficiency and normalization of loan loss provisions in line with our expectations.

Slide 6 points out the highlights of our third quarter performance. We generated normalized earnings of €0.21 per share, running ahead of full year 2023 guidance provided in July. We produced return on average tangible book of 17.6%. We delivered 9% net interest income growth versus the previous quarter on the back of continued net interest mining expansion and deposit cost containment. We recorded historically low operating expenses, down 8% year-on-year despite the inflationary environment with best-in-class cost-to-income ratio of 29% from 32% in Q2.

Our asset quality dynamics remain resilient with the NPE ratio standing at 5.5% and NPE coverage at 57%, up 50 basis points versus the previous quarter. We achieved €240 million net credit expansion in the quarter and €830 million in the nine months 2023 period building on the strength of our franchise. Our CET1 ratio stands at a solid 12.9%, 54 basis points higher quarter-on-quarter, while we have already met our January 1, 2024 MREL target of 21.8%. The remaining relatively manageable NPE portfolio of €2 billion as shown on Slide 14 is on a clear path to runoff through a combination of organic strategies.

On Slides 15 and 16, we present the movement of our performing loans. Q3 was a solid quarter with net credit expansion of €240 million that drove net credit expansion for the 9-month period to €830 million. The expansion has been supported by Piraeus strong take up of the RRF. We have already dispersed close to €270 million to approximately 50 credit Greek businesses, two-thirds of which are SMEs. This corresponds to more than 40% market share.

Piraeus has a superior liquidity profile presented on Slides 17 and 18. Our deposit base is granular, stable and of high quality. Our liquidity ratios are all solid as evidenced by the 242% liquidity coverage ratio and the 62% loan to deposit ratio both in the top percentile of the European space.

Turning to our capital base on Slides 19 and 20, the Q3 capital position is already at par with our full year 2023 target led by elevated capital generation of 130 basis points in 9 months 2023, while accruing for 10% dividend payout. This drove the CET1 ratio to 12.9% and total capital ratio to 17.6% in September 2023.

Moreover, on Slide 21, our new wealth and asset management strategy continues to produce strong results with assets under management reaching €8.5 billion at the end of September recording a 4% increase in Q3.

Finally, as Slide 22 shows it is clear we are well on track to meet or exceed our 2023 financial targets. Our established track record of financial transformation makes us confident in our ability to deliver in the longer-term. We offer an attractive and sustainable opportunity for our investors, both in terms of returns and profitable growth.

In Slide 24, we summarize the competitive advantages of Piraeus Bank across all areas, the commercial positioning and the financial strength of the bank indicate why its valuation remains attractive compared with his local and European peers.

From Slide 25 to Slide 32, we present the drivers behind this performance and where we stand against our domestic and European peers. We benchmark ourselves in terms of net interest margin, net fee margin, cost to core income ratio, and PE ratio and capital ratio. In all KPIs, we are now either at par or best in class. While we are growing our already sound capital buffers at an accelerated pace, we expect to generate significant value for our shareholders.

And with that, let’s open the floor to take any questions you may have.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

The first question comes from the line of Butkov Mikhail with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Butkov Mikhail

Good day. Thank you very much for the presentation and congratulations on strong results. I have three questions. The first question is on net interest margin outlook. In the short-term, let’s say on the 1-year horizon. What dynamic do you expect as we enter the period of stable rates probably for until the second half of next year. And beyond that, do you have a work on any hedging strategy to extend the high net interest margins before the rate cutting cycle starts? That’s the first question. The second question is S&P has recently upgraded the sovereign grade of Greece. Do you see any positive implications from that on any risk exposures on your balance sheet? And the third question is on assets under management. They – you recorded quite substantial growth year-to-date 23%. Was it related to the fact that customers reallocate their funds into the into securities or mutual funds, or you actually see market share gain from the competitors there? So that’s the third question. Thank you very much.

Theo Gnardellis

Hi, Mikhail. On NIM outlook. I mean, we are looking at high 2s right now. So I mean, we saw Q3 in itself was 2.7. We’re looking at the MIN at the 2.5 area. I would say assuming that ‘24 we have stable interest rates as you said there’s no reason to move from that level right. So ‘24 on average is expected to be most like ‘23 is an average, so rather the static situation there. Then on obviously, I mean with the current mid-swap curves are speaking for a long-term hedging strategy. Structural hedging on the liability side is a big strategic priority for the balance sheet. We have a strategy in place. We will be executing it over the coming months, so as to contain the NII and potential NII erosion as interest rates go into a dropping cycle. On your question about ratings, yes, rating upgrades help not directly linked to the S&P upgrades, but generally, upgrades are helping. There will be some RWA relief from that on particular exposures especially on the corporate side. We haven’t budgeted for it yet. We are still quantifying the impact. I think we will know more especially as of the new year.

Christos Megalou

And Mikhail, on assets under management, our wealth and asset management division is a key strategic focus of ours – for this year, and the next years to come. It is the result of a restructuring reorganization and an acquisition that we have concluded last year. And we see the benefits of the work that is being done in the division this year. And we expect to see this continuing over the next few years to come. The increase is mostly coming from an increase in penetration of asset management products in the market. We have already observed that as a percentage of GDP, the asset management products in Greece are at the lowest part of the European spectrum. And we expect this trend to be reversed. We gain our fair share and more of these increase through the work that we have done in putting together wealth and asset management division that is doing quite a lot of work on new products and are reaching now that segments in the market that we have not reached before. And what we have seen up to now is the benefits of these work, which as I said, we expect this to continue.

Butkov Mikhail

Thank you very much for the answers. Thank you very much for the details.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Ismailou Eleni with AXIA Ventures. Please go ahead.

Ismailou Eleni

Hello, and congratulations for the set of results. Just couple of questions from my side. One is how do you see the evolution of credit spreads and your lending expansion? And how can this affect profitability now 3 years when rates will flatten and then started going down? And the second one is just want to ask how should we think of the asset quality in the coming quarters? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis

Hi there. Well, the spreads have been – I would say one of the positive surprises of the story so far. We started out on the way up talking about pass-throughs of 60% and 65%. Now, the pass-throughs are around 80%, 70%, 79%. Now we are seeing a contraction of spreads in the new production there is about a 30 to 40 basis point erosion of the latest loans versus the stock. So I would say that we do expect and we are budgeting for an erosion of the overall spread of at those levels between 30 and 40 basis points, but still at quite high levels of above 2%. We are expecting spreads to stay at those levels on the way down we don’t expect them to widen. So the pass-throughs are going to reverse, but still with a deposit betas that we have kind of observed together with the spread levels. Net interest margin is expected to stay at high levels even then. So the strategic target for above 2% area seems to be feasible. But we will come back with more information on the 3-year outlook with the Q4 results.

On asset quality, look, I mean the inflows have been quite low. Even with rising interest rates, we have not seen any deterioration formations are neutral, the stock is static, the NPE ratio is dropping. And we will continue to have erosion of the stock with curings and organic things that we’re doing. It looks like a positive story. It is a risk going forward, especially depending on how long the interest rates are going to stay at these levels. But given the trajectory that we have, that we’re now looking at, is not a major concern.

Ismailou Eleni

Thank you very much for your answers and again, congratulations for the results.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Goodacre Sam with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Goodacre Sam

Good afternoon, Christos and Theo. Thanks very much for your time. I’m just continuing with the theme of NIMs and in particular net interest income. So you’ve obviously outperformed deposit betas are effectively at come September where you think they will settle potentially, and spreads are higher than expected with a stable NIM outlook. I think what the market is grappling with is when we actually reach peak, the peak in terms of net interest income, and arguably you keep going higher than market expectations. So from an NII perspective, can we now assume you have peaked in the third quarter? And then the second question is on your guidance, because from what I can see, you’re not making any revisions to the guidance for this year, yet, you’ve effectively delivered a very substantial amount of your targets, and in particular, you have outperformed on costs and cost of risk. So what sort of extent of upside to the very near-term outlook, might we expect? And is it going to continue to be on these two-line items? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis

I mean, the NII peak has been the big bet of the year, and every time we say we’re at the peak, and everything beaten the peaks on us are exactly how to answer that. Look, I think after the – after October 26 and the announcement of the ECB that we’re kind of plateauing on the DFR at least for now they’re suspended all action. Let’s just say that we have reached the peak of the mountain range, right. Maybe there is an extra peak somewhere next to it with a few tens of millions higher than what we are right now. But I think we are now at the NII of Q3 what was it 531. I think we are now at peak area, right. Q4 might have another good surprise for us for few tens of millions. But I think it’s safe to say that we have reached a plateau of peaks. Now, how long that’s going to stay there. On interest rates, I think it depends on how long the euro stays there. The assumption right now is at ‘24, we are going to stay at that plateau. Deposit beta has been very good, as you said. We could expect a further erosion of the mix in 2024, so a slight increase even given rate, but generally a good and nice story. I would say I think it’s trying to simulate €10 million up or down I think the 2.5% NIM is what people should be anchoring themselves to as long as interest rates stay where they are.

And to the guidance story, I mean, obviously, as you rightly pointed out, both in terms of returns and EPS, the forecast and the guidance kind of already beat. So sticking to it or kind of reiterating would definitely be an ultra conservative statement. We have a 9 month return of above15%, 15.5% if I remember correctly. We had a quarter of 18%. We have an NII that looks static. So there is practically no way that we are going to close the year, I mean knock wood at 14%. We are looking at about 15% return for this year, and EPS is probably going to beat €0.70. So, all the stuff that you mentioned on OpEx and cost of risk are organic, sustainable and based on actions that have been done for many, many quarters, years. So, there is no one-off there. This is what the bank looks like right now. This interest levels, you can say Piraeus Bank is returning 15%.

Goodacre Sam

Very clear. Thank you and congrats once again. Thanks.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of David Daniel with Autonomous Research. Please go ahead.

Daniel David

Hi. Congratulations on the results and thanks for taking my question. Just wondering just sticking on NII, any guidance you can give for sensitivity to rate cuts, it would be interesting to hear. And the second question just on Slide 40, I am noticing on deposits you are seeing some outflows in the corporate sector. It’s clearly offset by time, place and other sectors. But just any commentary you can give on. You are saying corporate would be interesting. And then the final one is just on Emerald, I know that you are kind of bang on your target for the start of the year – starting next year. Any interest in tapping markets before year-end to build a bit of headroom, or should we assume that you are just going to build some by the organic capital creation? And then just into 2024, any guidance on issuance activity will be interesting. I know that you have got Tier 2 coming up for call in June. Is that the first order of business or potentially would you look at some of your markets before that and guidance will be useful? Thanks.

Christos Megalou

Hi Dan. I mean on the Emerald, as we said with you, as we are right now, 25-bit volatility would translate with current positive rates between €35 million and €45 million of NII volatility. This is a number that’s very sensitive to hedging levels as well as positive assumptions. But right now given where we are I think that’s what you can use. Nothing to comment on deposit movement on corporates, the erosion, I think you are looking at what is outstanding around €0.5 billion. It’s really a seasonality story, nothing to write about. On Emerald, we don’t need to do anything, as you pointed out for ‘23. Especially on the senior front, I don’t expect that we will, well spotted on the Tier 2 for ‘24. As we approach June and depending on market conditions, there probably will be Tier 2 action on our side to replace on a cost effective manner that paper. I would say that is the number one priority given the organic profitability of the bank. There will be senior [ph] actions as well, but I think again, we will spot it Tier 2 is the number one priority right now.

Daniel David

Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question comes from the line Memisoglu Osman with Ambrosia Capital. Please go ahead.

Osman Memisoglu

Hello. I wanted to ask if you have – maybe I missed it, if you have the latest feeling on the deposit mix, given the very slow progression. Where do you see it approaching in the middle of next year or end of next year? That’s the first question. Then tied to that given your comments just a few minutes back, is 15% kind of the preliminary figure for the next year, assuming rates do what the swap markets expect them to do? Those are my questions. Thank you.

Christos Megalou

Hi Osman. Let us wait until Q4, until we confirm returns number for ‘24. As I have said before the elements, the constituents of the profitability are such that assuming a static interest rate environment with stable cost of risk, we don’t see much room or reason for change versus ‘23. But let us numerically confirm that in Q4. And the deposit mix, look I mean right now, yes, it has been much, much slower. We thought that our – what was it, 17% TD mix at the beginning of the year could reach to 30s, is currently in the low-20s. But we do have an assumption that the erosion will continue throughout ‘24 at current rates. This could be conservative. People might say that, if people have moved, they have moved and the rest are not going to and we have a big granular deposit base. That’s true. But right now, I think as long as we are not seeing any dramatic change in interest rate expectations, I think it’s safe to assume for the version to continue at current levels.

Osman Memisoglu

Okay. Maybe – thank you for that, maybe if I can squeeze in on asset quality, you mentioned formation is neutral. Was it just for Q3 or are you seeing muted or benign trends for Q4 as well?

Christos Megalou

Q3 was neutral given seasonality on the curing front, where we had kind of reduced curings in Q3 on the business front. This is something that we expected, because we are looking at the case and also a few that we are looking at them case by case. Q4, we do expect a higher curing rate or some case that will be – that will flow into Stage 2. This is also the way that the NPE ratio from its current 5.5 is going to drop to the below 5% that we have guided for. So yes, I mean, I don’t want to comment on formation. But in terms of nominal outflows, we do expect a higher number in Q4.

Osman Memisoglu

Perfect. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Nigro Alberto with Mediobanca. Please go ahead.

Nigro Alberto

Yes, thanks for taking my questions. First one on capital in light of the strong capital generation in this quarter, can you talk about Q4 evolution? And if there is any headwind coming into Q4 that that’s preventing you not to upgrade the capital target for this year? The second one is on cost. If there is any specific item in the G&A cost that does lead to the reduction we have seen in Q3? And the last one is on digital euro, what do you see as risk opportunities of the digital implementation? Have you budgeted the impact to your business model? Can you share it with us? Thank you.

Theo Gnardellis

Hi, Alberto. Look, Q4 is expected to be a big growth quarter. So I would say that is mainly the reason together with some one-off cost that we are going to be having in Q4, that’s mainly the reason why we are not – we don’t expect a dramatic kind of upsizing of the capital target, enough for us to change guidance. So a big credit expansion expected for Q4 to meet our guidance as well as the restructuring cost that we are going to be burning throughout Q4 given a voluntary exit program that’s going on right now to substantially reduce to yet another substantial reduction in the profile of the bank. So that’s mainly the reason nothing to report, particularly to report in G&A. This is all very granular structural work that has been doing – has been done across all lines. So you are really looking at run-rate situations. On digital euro, yes, we have looked at the initiative. We understand the – I’d say on a qualitative basis what could be pluses or minuses. We are now quantifying them and they will be baked into our new business plan. And we will come back into Q4 results to give you its impact.

Nigro Alberto

Thank you very much.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, there are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the conference over to Mr. Megalou for any closing comments. Thank you.

Christos Megalou

Thank you all for participating in our nine months 2023 results conference call. Very soon on November 27-28, we will be in London for the Athens Stock Exchange Greek Investment Conference. So we look forward to see you there, discuss with you during our investor outreach program as well, which will unfold also in ‘24. In the meantime, have a relaxing weekend.

For further details see:

Piraeus Financial Holdings S.A. (BPIRY) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript
Stock Information

Company Name: Piraeus Bank SA
Stock Symbol: BPIRF
Market: OTC

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