Turkiye Garanti Bankasi A.S. / Earnings Calls / April 30, 2025

    Operator

    Hello, and thank you for joining us in Garanti BBVA's First Quarter 2025 Financial Results Webcast. Our CEO, Mr. Mahmut Akten; our CFO, Mr. Aydin Guler; and our Head of Investor Relations, Ms. Ceyda Akinc, will be presenting today. [Operator Instructions] I now leave the floor to management for the presentation.

    Ceyda Akinc

    Hello, everyone. I'm pleased to present Garanti BBVA's first quarter earnings results. Before moving on to financials, I would like to go through the macro environment and our macro forecast. Turkish economy in first Q remained solid, supported by robust domestic demand. Given the strong momentum in the first quarter and the expansionary fiscal stance, we expect GDP growth to be 3.5% this year. Inflation is set to decline, supported by tighter financial conditions, moderating private consumption and lower commodity prices. Following the latest internal and external market volatility, we revised up our year-end inflation estimate from 29% to 31%, while acknowledging upside risks from uncertainty in food prices. As you're all familiar with, following the turmoil, CBRT took all necessary market-friendly actions to address economic imbalances, gave a strong message to rebuild confidence and anchor foreign currency expectations. Once the effects of recent internal and external shocks begin to abate, CBRT can again start easing June onwards. Yet given the potentially higher risk premium levels going forward, we think that CBRT might keep a slightly higher ex-post real rate of at least 4 percentage points by year-end. Moving on the current account deficit. We expect current account deficit to GDP to slightly worsen to 1.5% in 2025 due to deterioration in core trade deficit and increasing net gold imports. Fiscal policies stayed expansionary in early months of the year. Therefore, fiscal consolidation may be more clearly seen in the second half of the year. Accordingly, we maintain our forecast of budget GDP at 3.5%, yet cash deficit to GDP ratio might remain above 4% due to potential risks on near-term growth outlook. Now, moving into first quarter financial results. We kicked off 2025 with a solid performance. Net income reached TRY 25.4 billion. This marks a 13% year-over-year growth with robust ROE at 30.5%, despite relatively low leverage of 9.3x. Our internal capital generation continued to support our capital ratios. Key driver of this earnings strength is core banking income, as you can see on Page 7. Core banking continues to be our pillar of strength, delivering unmatched revenue growth and highlighting the sustainable nature of the bank's profitability. Core NII surged by 68% Q-on-Q on the back of declining funding costs and resilient loan yields, which I will touch upon this in detail in the coming slides. Clean trading gains contribution was relatively modest in this quarter due to derivative transactions MTMs, which can be considered as nonrecurring. Net fees also held up well, growing 4% Q-on-Q on the back of strong activity. As a consequence, our core banking revenues to assets reached 7.9% in first Q, which suggests the highest level and improvement. A big part of this success stems from our asset mix, as you can see in Slide 8. Our lending-driven asset composition remains as a key differentiator. Performing loans now make up 55% of assets, suggesting a slight decline compared to 4Q, and this has to do with robust deposit growth related increase in reserve requirements. Yet we continue to differentiate with our high share of loans in the mix. Lending growth was across the board. I will explain the key drivers of TL loans in the next slide, but on foreign currency side, I would like to highlight that half of the growth was coming from the increasing euro-dollar parity impact. In securities, we had CPI redemptions during the quarter, and we invested in long-term fixed rate securities in the beginning of the year. In foreign currency securities, we had opportunistic purchases during the year. Moving into Slide 9 for further insights on our loan portfolio. In first Q, our TL loans grew by 7%, reaching TRY 1.2 trillion. Credit card growth slowed down compared to first Q, yet we maintained strong growth momentum in consumer and SME loans. We gained market share in general purpose loan, mortgages, micro and small enterprises, and solidified our leading position in these loan segments. While growing, we always act with prudency. Now let's look at the evolution of our asset quality. Increase in Stage 2 loans was limited in first Q, backed by strong economic activity. Now Stage 2 loans make up 10.5% of our gross loans with 11% coverage. More importantly, if we look at TL foreign currency breakdown, our foreign currency Stage 2 loans coverage remained healthy at 26%. Now let's move through the evolution of our NPLs. Our asset quality is normalizing as expected. The NPL ratio rose slightly to 2.6%. In line with the expectation, majority of net flows was from retail and credit cards. We are witnessing the natural consequence of robust consumer and credit card growth sector registered in the last couple of years. Our total coverage levels remain healthy at 3.6% compared to NPL ratio of 2.6%. Now moving into provisioning. This year, we guided for higher cost of risk due to increasing NPL inflows from unsecured loans and normalizing large ticket collections. As of first Q, we have started to see this trend. On a reported basis, net provisions, excluding currency surged notably, yet last quarter base was exceptionally low due to large ticket collections and reclassification-related provision release of a large ticket item. Our first quarter net cost of risk realized at 1.4%, better than our year-end guidance of 2% to 2.5% level, which is supported by better GDP growth related macro adjustment. Despite better-than-expected performance, we maintain our year-end guidance for cost of risk. In an increasing interest rate environment, our cost of risk level will converge to our guidance towards the end of the year. Now moving into the other side of the balance sheet, how we are funding this growth. Not only in assets, but also in funding, we rely on customer-driven sources, which is the backbone of our success. With the outstanding growth we registered in first Q, deposit share in assets increased by 2% and reached 74%. Following the internal developments in mid-March, we witnessed accelerated growth in deposits, both in TL and foreign currency. On TL side, due to increasing deposit rates and conversion from money market funds, we registered 18% growth. Here, I should also admit that 75% of TL deposit growth was coming from retail, which was relatively lower cost and [indiscernible]. Growing demand deposit base in line with our expanding customer base also supported this growth. In TL deposits, we gained 1.1% market share among private banks and our market share reached 22%. On foreign currency side, due to increased dollarization tendency, especially among corporates, we witnessed surge in foreign currency deposits. Hence, 70% of foreign currency deposit growth was from corporates and the pace of increase has slowed down compared to initial reaction in mid-March. While growing, we always keep a close eye on spread management as it's visible in our net interest income on next page. In first quarter, we continue to deliver best-in-class NIM amid market shifts. Our core NII increased by 68%, which alludes to 145 bps increase in core margin. This quarter, CPI contribution reduced by almost half as we used 28% rate in the valuation of CPI linkers. Accordingly, net interest margin, including swap cost, increased by 45 bps in the first quarter. Looking at the core spreads in more detail, up until mid-March, in a declining interest rate environment, we were able to reflect the expected rate cut into our TL deposit pricing, hence, our TL time deposit cost declined by 3%, whereas drop in TL loan yields was limited with 1%. This is a result of effective duration GAAP management and also strong presence in relatively less interest rate sensitive loan products, namely consumer loans. In this current macro background, given CBRT's tightening measures, we are observing an increase in funding costs, which also leads to an adjustment in lending yields. That said, current volatility looks more like a postponement in margin recovery rather than a disruption of the overall story. And the overall impact on NIM will depend on how macroeconomic variables, particularly interest rates and currency levels evolve in the coming period. Now moving on to the next slide to break down the components of margin strength. Margin reliance is rooted in our assets and funding strategy. In our TL assets, the share of TL loans is 58% versus securities share is only 15%. In a period where loan yields are about 2x higher than securities, this presents a significant and sustainable revenue advantage. On liabilities, TL time deposit share in TL liabilities is 86%. And here, we continue to preserve our funding cost benefit versus repo in an increasing interest rate environment. Now moving on our fees on Page 16. Our fee base remains robust, up by 55% year-over-year. On an annual basis, payment system fees continued to lead the growth, yet its share has started to decelerate in line with the expectation. On a quarterly basis, strong cash and noncash loan growth, which supported lending-related and insurance fees, followed by increasing money transfer fees. Digital penetration continues to rise. Number of digital customers reached 17 billion. Our strength in digital banking reinforces fee base by driving growth in customer acquisition and customer penetration. Now moving on to our operating expenses. We are keeping our costs under control, growing in line with the budget. Operating expenses grew 4% Q-on-Q. Quarterly HR cost growth reflects annual salary adjustment and rollover impact of previous adjustments. In terms of efficiency, we continue to have the best ratios among private peers, as you can see on the comparative charts on the right-hand side. As per our capital strength, our capital-generative growth strategy continued to support the solvency, and we maintained sector-leading capital ratios even after 20% dividend payout and annual operational risk adjustment. These 2 had 1.7% impact on capital adequacy ratio. Our consolidated common equity Tier 1 ratio stands at 13% without forbearance. Foreign currency sensitivity on our capital adequacy ratio is low 15.5 basis points for every 10% depreciation. We have a strong TRY 105 billion excess capital, which will continue to support us to absorb any volatility. Before we conclude, I would like to go through to our guidance. In TL loans, we expect slightly positive real growth versus year-end inflation forecast. In foreign currency loans, we are faring in line with the guidance. We continue to abide by regulatory caps on foreign currency and increase in euro-dollar parity could drive foreign currency loan growth to the low teens. In terms of net cost of risk, despite better-than-expected first quarter performance, we think in an increasing interest rate environment, it will converge to the guided range towards the year-end. In terms of NIM, CBRT's current tight stance may postpone some margin recovery, but we think we still need time to see the evolution of macroeconomic variables in the coming periods. Fees and OpEx growth also on track with the guidance. And as a consequence, we maintain our low-30s ROAE guidance. While acknowledging the postponement of NIM recovery, we believe we can end the year within the guided range. This concludes my presentation. Thank you for listening. Now we can take your questions.

    Operator

    [Operator Instructions] The first question is from Mehmet Sevim. Hi Mehmet, please unmute yourself and ask your question.

    Mehmet Sevim

    [indiscernible] I just wanted to ask and follow up on your NIM guidance for the full year. And specifically, you've mentioned there is some downside risk, but understandably, you want to wait and see where the monetary policy goes. But are you able to give us any color at this stage in terms of where the exit NIMs would reach based on what we know today and also how maybe the new quarter started off? And anything maybe [indiscernible] on that side, that would be really helpful. Considering, obviously, you started the year much better than your peers and also your exit NIM guidance for the full year previously was much higher than for your peers as well. So that's one. And secondly, also, you mentioned during the presentation that you gained some market share in deposits, which I think is quite interesting given obviously the volatility that we saw in the market. So maybe qualitatively, what are the reasons behind this? Is there anything you can share what led to this market share gain in those more volatile times, especially from retail?

    Mahmut Akten

    Thank you, Mehmet. Let me start with the first one. In terms of NIM, as we indicated, as Ceyda indicated, the expansion, we expect 3% throughout the year. We didn't want to change it really because we want to see the next few months, especially whether there will be a significant cut in June -- later in June. So, there's quite a bit of time till then. And that's number one. And in the fourth quarter, in the meeting we had, if you remember, we mentioned that we have a relatively good duration. We increased our duration late last year, and we're expecting NIM expansion, further expansion until the third quarter. In the third quarter, we would have expected the highest NIM. So, these changes in the cost of funding actually deferred this NIM expansion to the fourth quarter. It's like really everything is a bit deferred by 3 months as it looks right now. And so that's the main reason. We still expect a similar trend. But now in the second quarter, there will be a slight reduction in customer loan minus customer funding, but there is a KKM impact as well. We had a higher hit from KKM, close to 55 bps in the first quarter results. So second quarter, very likely NIM will be higher than the first quarter overall. But then with the June potential cut, we expect NIM to expand further. Given that situation, we don't want to change it right now. This was one item. There is a potential downside risk, but very limited, not significant in terms of material impact. Also, Ceyda mentioned that we are keeping our cost of risk flat with the earlier guidance. But there, we see also potential upside as well, even though we expect some normalization, but there is an immaterial upside there as well. So, we stick with our numbers in the NIM as well. So, in the next quarter, we might have a better projection for you. And in terms of TL time deposit and demand deposit as well, our strategy as in the previous quarters, I mentioned as well is expand our customer base and close to -- be close to the customers. We are doing many things to do that. Regardless of this market, we wanted to rely on customer deposit as we do in the asset side, customer loans to have healthier balance sheet. So, it has not been related to volatility, although volatility helped in these times, when there is volatility, we further expand our customer base. But majority of those market share gain is attributable to January and February, not March really. And it worked very well in the interest increasing environment. So, it costs close to 300 to 400 bps lower to have a deposit on the marginal level than the repo funding. And it has been regardless of whether interest rate is going down or up, we always focus on expanding our customer base, and we have gained substantial market share also in credit cards as well, which is also helpful in terms of increasing our sticky customer. I hope it answers your question.

    Mehmet Sevim

    It does, thanks very much.

    Operator

    [Operator Instructions] We have a written question from Valentina. How do you see TRY deposit costs evolving in coming quarters given recent rate hikes? And what trajectory of NIM you expect by the end of year? And what are your assumptions that back up your exit NIM guidance?

    Mahmut Akten

    Valentina, I tried to partially answer the similar question by Mehmet as well. But basically, the way it's going to be evolving at the moment, basically in the second quarter in terms of customer spread and cost of funding. Cost of funding will go up as we see, given the marginal cost of funding in the repo market and Central Bank went up significantly. But as you know, policy rate only went up by 350 bps, but the marginal cost went up almost 650 bps. We expect in the coming days, this marginal overnight rate will be coming down to policy rate first and further in June to evolve further down, which will help our spread and NIM to expand. And as I said earlier, we expect a NIM expansion at the end of the year, given this cost of funding correcting itself over time. And it appears like the projections we have done in November when we were preparing our budget for the full year, the whole projection has been deferred by 3 months or so in terms of cost of funding and margins. So, instead of the margins picking up in the third quarter, it is picking up in the fourth quarter. And by year-end, we expect our policy rate to come down to 35%, leaving 400, 500 bps in terms of above ex-ante inflation. And given that, we expect our cost of funding also decreasing below the policy rate, somewhere between 32% or so at the marginal level typically because our cost of -- marginal cost of funding is 300, 400 bps below the policy rate. And there was another question from Valentina. Lastly, can you update us on your Eurobond issuance plans for the rest of the year? We have been in the market last year, as you have pointed out, and then we might be in the market again opportunistically as the market corrects itself, as we see more liquidity. And given that our continuous focus on growth, this might be -- there might be good opportunities to leverage the market, especially on sub-debt Tier 2. I hope this answers those 2 questions.

    Operator

    It seems like we don't have any more questions. So this concludes the Q&A session. I now leave the floor for closing remarks.

    Mahmut Akten

    Thank you all for attending this meeting. As we complete the first quarter of this year, we are again proud to deliver very strong and resilient results. Regardless of the volatility, regardless of our CPI linker or any other factor, we still continue to provide good results. This is mainly driven our customer-centric approach as we just discussed about the deposit cost and deposit customer base, how we expand. Also strong capital base and our continuous focus on innovation, which in these meetings, in these calls, it's hard to talk about those details, but we are doing a lot of innovation in especially digital space with subsidies as well as our mobile app. This further helps us to further strengthen our leadership, which also help in terms of further expansion of our customer base. And we see also this with market share gains. We achieved across lending, deposits, digital platform, payment system, and this reflects the success of our continuous strategy and execution. Looking forward, we remain confident that our agility and financial strength will help us to navigate any uncertainty in global or local market as demonstrated by our consistent track record in the past as well. Again, thank you very much for your participation, and have a nice evening to all. Thank you.

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