Bank stocks are a proxy for the country's economic growth and the promise of achche din (good days) have driven the prices of these stocks quite sharply over the past 12 months. Bank Nifty is up 82.5 per cent over the last one year, which is more than double the returns the Nifty has given in the same period. This outperformance, however, is not based on actual economic improvement, which is what has led the market to turn bearish on these stocks. The Bank Nifty is down 9.3 per cent after hitting a life-time high on January 27.
Despite concessions, large cap banks have seen non-performing assets (NPAs) rise fourfold from 2.7 per cent of loans in FY09 to 4 per cent of loans in FY14. Fresh additions of NPAs have risen from 2 per cent of loans in FY09 to 2.7 per cent in FY14. The deterioration in balance-sheet has led to a drop in earnings quality. Return on assets has dropped from 1.2 per cent to 0.9 per cent for large-cap banks.
Given that there is no sign of any revival in the economy, analysts are now coming to terms with the reality that earnings and returns profile will remain a challenge, as FY16 will continue to see a sharp build up in impaired assets. What will make matters worse is that the restructured portfolio of banks is now turning into non-performing assets. Analysts believe that impaired assets of public sector banks are understated due to sale of NPAs to asset reconstruction companies. With asset sales slowing down in FY16, the accretion of stressed assets will accelerate believe analysts.