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Access Holding Plc: An imminent share price surge is inevitable

Bank of Zambia approves merger between Access Bank Zambia and African Banking Corporation Zambia

Access Holding Plc’s share price has been lagging behind its earnings and seems not to reflect its market valuation.

While its earnings have grown on average by 21.39% per year over the past five years, its share price has fallen on average by 2.30% per year.

For example, in the 2017 FY, the bank reported a profit after tax of N60.074 billion compared to N158 billion reported in FY 2021, more than double in less than 5 years. Earnings per share (EPS) has also risen from N3.3 to N4.5 during this period.

But on the flip side, the share price of the bank peaked in 2018; rising to as high as N13.35 on March 15th, 2018.  Despite the EPS growth, it is yet to hit that level since then.

More recently, Access Holdings Plc reported its highest gross earnings in 9 years, amounting to N906.9 billion in 9M 2022, representing a 30.85% growth.

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But while earnings grew by 12.27% in the first nine months, the Bank’s share price declined by about 8.6% having opened the year with a share price of N9.30 and ended at N8.50. It is as if, the higher its earnings the lower its valuation.

The future: In a bid to assure shareholders that the past is not a reflection of the future, the bank hosted an investment forum where it outlined its 5-year growth plans.

At the event held on the 17th of January, Access released to the investing public its 2027 5-year strategy document, projecting a healthy and improved return on equity of 25%-30% by 2027 compared to the 18% in 2021, to be driven by improvements in cost to income ratio (CIR).

As exciting as this future looks for Access Bank, shareholders will be pondering what it could take for the bank’s current share price to reflect not just the future but the present.

Is it undervalued? At N5.05 EPS (TTM) the bank is trading at a trailing twelve months price-to-earnings ratio of 1.77x, which is below the peer average ratio of 2.4x and the African Banks Industry average ratio of 5.4x, which makes it cheaper and of a good value.

It is easy to point to its outstanding shares of the company which currently stands at about 35.5 billion units second only to its fellow tier 1 bank FBNH with 35.9 billion units.

At the current price-to-earnings multiple of 1.7x, a share price surge is inevitable for Access Bank.


Note: The writer, Nairametrics, or any of its staff may or may not hold shares in any of the companies under review. This analysis should not be taken as an investment recommendation but merely the opinion of the author(s).   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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