Dear StockCentral Community!
I’m excited to present to you my analysis of East West Bancorp. Amidst all the blood in the streets in the banking sector, I bought some of this stock with the belief that it was a quality company with a history of good growth and an attractive PE ratio (about 9 at the time I bought . . . about a month ago).
Since my purchase, the value of this stock has fallen 20%. Ouch! But my analysis, so far, suggests that my original basis for buying is still intact.
I will start today by posting my stock study and describing how I approached it. For the remainder of the week, I plan to dig beyond the stock study to examine some of the risks. Let’s see if my current favorable opinion of this company holds up to my own continuing analysis and (even better) to your scrutiny and analysis!
By way of background, this bank primarily serves the Chinese-American community in Southern California. It has about $11B in assets and a book value of about $1.2B, so it’s larger than a typical community bank but smaller than a typical money center bank. What initially struck me about EWBC was its strong 10-year revenue growth of 24.8% and 10-year earnings growth of 20.7%.
Its loan exposure is largely in southern California real estate, but no sub-prime loans. We’ll talk more about these “risk factors” during the week.
Let’s start with the front page of the stock study, which I have attached in various formats. Despite 20%+ historic growth rates, I projected a much lower growth rate of 5% annually for the next five years. This was in part influenced by preliminary Q1 2008 figures (not shown in the study) with earnings of 8 cents per share (for the quarter) and an analyst (RBC Capital Markets analyst Joe Morford) estimating 2008 earnings of $1.00 per share, a steep decrease from the $2.60 for 2007.
So, I think there’s a pretty safe assumption that 2008 earnings will be down. This is mainly due to management’s expectation of loan losses, based on current loans in default or delinquency, plus expectations for additional troubled loans going forward.
Big question: are the recent loan loss provisions temporary or permanent factors? Given the company’s conservative loan-to-value ratios, if you think the recession will last a year or two and then prices will plateau or rise, there’s good reason to believe that EWBC’s earnings will bounce back up to historic levels.
If, on the other hand, you see worsening real estate prices for 5 or more years, then EWBC’s earnings could stay low, which would not be good for the stock price.
My assumption is that real estate prices will stabilize within the next two years, as they usually do as recessions pass.
Next question: could loan losses threaten to a) significantly reduce the asset base of the bank, or b) require the bank to raise dilutive equity? I’m going to assume neither possibility is a significant factor for now, but this question warrants further discussion. (Note: EWBC just announced an equity issue of about $150M)
So based on the above, I am considering 5% annual earnings growth an appropriate expectation for 5-year growth, assuming a year or two (or maybe three) of low earnings, followed by catch up to historic levels.
Turning to the back side of the stock study, I discarded the three highest profit margin and ROE figures in the past five years, based on the conservative premise that the happiest of past times will not return and as such, the lowest of these historic figures are the best prediction of the future.
Ditto for historic PE ratios: the assumption of slower growth and expected higher inflation rates (which usually causes nominal interest rates to rise) should cause PE ratios to be unlikely to return to the headiest of historic levels. On the other hand, a short recession and resumption of EWBC’s historic growth could cause the stock to appreciate well beyond my estimates.
The 5-year PE range my study predicts is between 9.9 and 16.8. Note that the current PE ratio of 5.5 is based on trailing earnings. . .the “leading” PE ratio based on an assumption of $1.00 annual EPS for 2008 suggests a PE ratio of 14.7, which is within the range suggested in my stock study.
The high price of 3.31 EPS x PE of 16.8 is $55.60. Wouldn’t that be nice! For the low price, I decide to go below what Toolkit recommended. I took one analyst’s estimate that the price will go to 12, and took a haircut to it . . . to 10. This would also suggest a PE of 10 at EPS of $1, which is pretty close to a reasonable worse case scenario (to get to this level, EWBC’s financial performance would have to show no improvement 5 years from now from 2008 levels, which I think is unlikely).
Even with this conservative low price, the stock study shows EWBC to be in the buy range with an upside/downside ratio of 9.4 to 1.
5-year potential (note the word “potential”) shows a 31.8% annual return including the expected dividend yield.
What do YOU think?
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