The strength of the Australian banking sector is difficult to reconcile with the fundamentals.
The sector has generated an extraordinary total return of ~50% over the last twelve months, despite a tepid earnings growth outlook and increasingly extreme valuations.
With the ASX 200 being highly concentrated among banks and resources, the momentum of the ‘Big 4’ banks has been supported by a rotation out of the under-pressure resources sector. This is being exacerbated by passive flows, increasing foreign institutional ownership and quant/momentum trading.
While both the banks and the major iron ore miners are relatively unattractive from a fundamental standpoint, this report provides a top-down view of the banking sector’s current run of market leadership over resources.
The rally in the banks has not been confined to the local market.
Major offshore banks have also posted strong gains over the last 12 months, which have been supported by the Fed’s pivot towards an easing bias in late 2023, and expectations that lower interest rates would support ‘soft landings’ across developed economies.
This dynamic has been quickly priced into bank valuations, both on the ASX and globally.
ASX 200 bank sector valuations are expensive relative to global peers and ASX industrials
In an absolute sense, the ASX 200 bank sector’s forward PE multiple has never been higher, led by index heavyweight, the Commonwealth Bank (CBA).
Perplexingly, CBA trades on double the PE multiple of JP Morgan (24x vs 12x) – which is arguably the highest quality bank in the world – while having a lower return on equity (13% vs 15%), and offering a similar level of earnings growth (3yr consensus EPS CAGR of 6% vs 4%).
More importantly than the ASX 200 bank sector's absolute valuation, its valuation is also stretched relative to ASX industrials (i.e. ASX 200 ex resources). Moreover, we note that ASX 200 industrials have also re-rated strongly this year to date amidst the rotation out of resources, meaning bank valuations are effectively at the expensive end of what is a relatively expensive market.
However, when stripping out CBA, ‘Big 3’ Bank valuations are more reasonable on a relative basis (vs ASX industrials) compared to where they have traded historically.
Accordingly, the Focus Portfolio’s positioning within the sector is concentrated among the better valued ‘Big 3’ banks, with exposure to ANZ, Westpac, and NAB (and zero weighting to CBA).
China’s economy has been subdued, with persistent weakness in property construction activity, consumption and aggregate GDP growth. This is weighing on China’s demand for commodities, particularly iron ore.
The level of government policy support provided to China’s struggling property sector thus far has resulted in negligible impacts on property sales or construction activity, albeit the latest stimulus could help to stimulate activity. While the ultimate impact of China's latest stimulus is still unclear (see below), to date the iron ore market has been clouded by the structural imbalances in the country's real estate sector.
Overall, the resources sector has seen significant negative consensus earnings momentum amidst the worsening outlook for China’s economy and key commodity prices, making it an unattractive destination for investor capital.
China's latest stimulus package aims to reinvigorate its economy
Yesterday, the Chinese government announced a range of broad measures aimed at stimulating its faltering economy, property sector, and stock market, including:
While the impacts of these measures are unclear at this stage, if the latest stimulus translates to meaningful improvements in China’s underlying economy, this would augur positively for commodity demand and, therefore, the outlook of the ASX resources sector.
In a fundamental sense, both the major banks and iron ore miners are unattractive in our view (and hence the Focus Portfolio is underweight both). As aforementioned, the banking sector trades on an excessive valuation, while the resources sector faces weak sentiment and a negative earnings outlook.
However, due to the concentration of the local market, index-aware and large cap investors in Australia are often left with little or no choice but to remain (at least partially) invested in one of these two sectors (which in combination account for nearly ~60% of the ASX 200).
With such large positions in the index, market leadership has always been driven by one of these two dominant sectors. This year-to-date we have witnessed a market rotation into the banks as a source of ‘relative safety’ (compared to the resources sector), which is reflected in the sector’s positive (albeit only modest) consensus earnings momentum this year-to-date.
There are several technical factors that are likely exacerbating or contributing to the bank sector’s ongoing momentum, helping to drive valuations well beyond ‘reasonable’ levels based on the fundamentals, including:
With bank earnings multiples at all-time highs and the outlook for earnings growth still tepid at the best, we are comfortable retaining a significant underweight to the ‘Big 4’ banks within the Focus Portfolio.
While the timing of when valuations will de-rate is inherently uncertain (and bank/resources market leadership cycles can last for years), we are confident that the bank sector’s current valuation premium cannot be sustained in the long run, without a dramatic, unforeseen change in the earnings growth picture.
Potential catalysts for a de-rate of the bank sector could include:
While bank/resources market leadership cycles can technically persist for years, we are comfortable with the Focus Portfolio’s underweight positioning in the banks and iron ore mines given both sectors are unattractive overall from a fundamental standpoint.
Given the bank sector’s stretched valuations, the portfolio’s positioning is concentrated in the banks that offer the best relative value, with ANZ being the portfolio’s sole overweight exposure.
Meanwhile, the portfolio is underweight iron ore, with a selective exposure to BHP, which is our preference as the lowest cost producer and the most diversified major (with greater exposure to copper).
Notwithstanding the portfolio's underweight to iron ore, the portfolio is actively positioned in companies exposed to commodities with attractive long-term supply/demand outlooks, including copper (SFR), gold (EVN), oil/gas (WDS), lithium (LTM), and diversified base metals (S32).
The Focus Portfolio also remains active in the corners of the market that provide strong earnings growth, including technology and healthcare.
Greg is an Equity Strategist in the Investment Strategy team at Wilsons Advisory. He is the lead portfolio manager of the Wilsons Advisory Australian Equity Focus Portfolio and is responsible for the ongoing management of the Global Equity Opportunities List.
About Wilsons Advisory: Wilsons Advisory is a financial advisory firm focused on delivering strategic and investment advice for people with ambition – whether they be a private investor, corporate, fund manager or global institution. Its client-first, whole of firm approach allows Wilsons Advisory to partner with clients for the long-term and provide the wide range of financial and advisory services they may require throughout their financial future. Wilsons Advisory is staff-owned and has offices across Australia.
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