Here are three reasons why the vultures have to wait.
With Axis Bank announcing the exit of its CEO Shikha Sharma by year-end, vultures may begin circling over the bank. Nomura Bank has already suggested that this may be the right time for Kotak Mahindra Bank to bid for Axis, thanks to the latter’s higher valuation multiples. At current market prices, Kotak’s market capitalisation is around Rs 2,13,000 crore against Axis’s 1,38,000 crore. A bid based partly in cash and rest in share will be vastly to the benefit of Kotak.
Nomura says that a merger would make Kotak the largest private bank in terms of branches, higher even than ICICI Bank’s 4,860 (against 5,760 for Kotak plus Axis). Its loan book would be nearly as large as big daddy HDFC Bank, at Rs 6.16 lakh crore against the latter’s Rs 6.31 lakh crore, says an Economic Times report quoting Nomura.
But the vultures have to wait. For three reasons.
First, no bidding can happen without a wink and a nod from the government, since government institutions, including the Special Undertaking of the UTI (SUUTI) and LIC, among others, hold over 26 per cent of Axis shares. Through various institutions, the government is the key promoter of Axis.
Second, Kotak can bid, but it will face equally strong rivals. Some time last year, when Kotak is understood to have approached the government for buying out its SUUTI stake, HDFC Bank immediately woke up to the threat and CEO Aditya Puri talked about being interested. One can’t rule out foreign banks bidding for Axis if the field is open for them. It will be a feeding frenzy – and hence costly for the eventual winner.
Three, creating bigger and bigger private bank colossuses through mergers will not be in the government’s short-term interests. If HDFC Bank and Kotak (assuming it gets Axis) become the biggest two banks in the private sector, it will force an even greater consolidation in the private banking space, with other high-value banks (IndusInd, Yes Bank, etc) getting into the picture. This will leave public sector banks as poor cousins of private banks and a permanent liability on the government’s hands. Uday Kotak has already said that over the next five years, private banks will raise their market share to 50 per cent from 30 per cent today. The government should worry that the jewels in its banking crown are fast turning to charcoal.