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Maintain BUY and MYR7 TP, 6% upside and c.3% FY25F (Feb) yield. Aeon Credit Service’s FY24 results came in ahead of our estimates on stronger- than-expected NII. Our initial read-through of the numbers was positive – receivables growth remained robust across the board, and asset quality appears to be improving. We maintain our forecasts and TP for now, pending the results briefing today.
Results review. ACSM’s FY24 net profit of MYR414.0m (+2% YoY) beat our estimates, but came in line with Street’s. The deviation from our numbers mostly stemmed from better-than-expected interest income. YoY profit drivers were NII (+18%) and non-II (+9%), whereas opex (+13%) and impairment allowances (+45%) were the key YoY drags. QoQ, 4QFY24 saw 2% NII growth helped by robust receivables growth, while impairment allowances halved thanks to a net write-back of provisions. However, the bottomline was softened by the maiden recognition of associate losses from the much-anticipated digital bank amounting to MYR16.6m, bringing net profit for the quarter to MYR114m (+33% QoQ). A final DPS of MYR0.14 was declared, bringing FY24 total payout to 34.0% (FY23: 30.3%).
Robust receivables growth. ACSM saw its financing receivables grow +13% YoY in FY24, which beat management’s guidance of a c.10% growth for the year. Robust credit demand from higher credit quality customers, along with successful marketing campaigns, ensured YoY growth was strong across the board. Personal financing (+22%) and credit cards (+11%) were expectedly good, while motorcycle financing also grew a decent +5% despite the group having tightened its credit scoring requirements earlier during the year.
Benefitting from tighter credit requirements. ACSM’s sequentially lower NPL ratio of 2.57% (3QFY24: 2.73%) potentially reflects an improvement in the underlying asset quality post the aforementioned tightening of credit scoring requirements for motorcycle financing facilities. As a result of having a higher proportion of better-credit-quality customers and improved collection performance, the group was able to write-back c.MYR59m in provisions in 4QFY24. Looking ahead, we do not expect provision write- backs to recur, but think a credit cost run rate of 2.5-3% is possible (4QFY24/FY24 credit cost: 2.3%/3.4%).
FY25 guidance. In FY25F, the group will aim for 10% receivables growth and c.13% ROE – we view both targets as modest, as it implies a softening from FY24 figures. However, the 10% receivables growth target is still ahead of our more conservative +8% assumption for FY25F.
No changes to our forecasts and TP pending the results briefing later today. However, we see upside risks to our estimates, given the results beat. Our TP of MYR7 includes a 2% ESG premium.
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