Is Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc A Promising Capital-Growth Investment?

Some firms’ growth is more sustainable than others. What about Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc (LON: RBS)?

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

RBSWith Royal Bank of Scotland Group (LSE: RBS) (NYSE: RBS.US) reporting profits up last week in its preliminary half-time results, it’s tempting to ask whether the firm is an attractive investment vehicle for capital growth.

Tempting it might be, but as with most temptation, the notion is probably best avoided.

Bumpy times ahead

On the surface, headline figures look good. The firm expects profit before tax to be £2,652 million for the first half of 2014, up around 93% from the £1,374 million achieved at half time in 2013. Operating profit at £2,601 million is up about 267% from the £708 million reached a year ago.

It’s enough to set the heart a flutter. Surely Royal Bank of Scotland has put its troubles behind and morphed into a sparkling new grower set to shoot the lights out for investors on capital growth? Not so fast, cautions the firm’s own CEO. Royal Bank of Scotland has its hands full managing down what he describes as a slate of legacy issues including significant conduct and litigation matters that will likely hit profits going forward. Despite two good quarters, bumps in the road remain, and no one at the bank is complacent about the challenges ahead, he reckons.

Back to a new normal

A bounce back in profits doesn’t presage a new growth era for Royal Bank of Scotland. Profits need to be up, the firm posted dire losses for years. The financial record on profits speaks for itself:

Year to December 2009 2010 2012 2013 2014
Operating profit (£m) (2,647) (469) (1,190) (5,277) (8,243)

It seems that second-half losses overwhelmed 2013’s first-half profit and that could easily happen again this year. Royal Bank of Scotland continues its restructuring and unwinding of inflated asset positions, and those conduct and litigation issues could bite hard too.

Yet, city forecasters have around £4,378 million of pre-tax profit pencilled in for full-year 2014 followed by a 16% uplift the year after. That’s the new normal for Royal Bank of Scotland and, at today’s share price around 364p, means the shares trade on a forward P/E multiple of around 16 for the current year, falling to around 13.5 for 2015.

That’s not cheap, particularly when we consider the cyclicality inherent in the banking sector. Forward-looking markets tend to compress P/E ratings of cyclical companies as macro-economic cycles unfold, in anticipation of the next profit collapse. That’s a powerful current working against capital growth for investors in Royal Bank of Scotland right now, and the continuing absence of a dividend makes matters worse.

Credit-crunch hangover

The affects of cyclicality on share prices and underlying business performance can be hard to predict. Royal Bank of Scotland crashed hard with the last down-dip and now battles to shrink its pre-credit crunch balance sheet that bubbled up to a highly geared £800 billion or so.

The hangover of unwinding such an over-pumped asset position continues to pound. For example, cash performance struggles and the asset base shrinks:

Year to December 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Net cash from operations (£m) (992) 19,291 3,325 (45,113) (30,631)
Net assets (£m) 94,631 76,851 76,053 70,448 59,215

Headline profit figures might sound tempting just now, but I want to see what’s happening in the ‘real’ indicators of business worth: cash and assets. We’ll be able to measure progress when Royal Bank of Scotland releases its full-year results around the end of February 2015.

What now?

Royal Bank of Scotland’s cyclicality rules the firm out as a growth investment for me.

Kevin Godbold has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the shares mentioned.

More on Investing Articles

Rolls-Royce's Pearl 10X engine series
Investing Articles

Down 18% in weeks, is now the time to snap up Rolls-Royce shares?

Rolls-Royce shares have sunk in recent weeks -- and not without good cause, in our writer's opinion. Could this offer…

Read more »

Santa Clara offices of NVIDIA
Investing Articles

With a forward P/E of 24.4, this US phenomenon looks incredibly cheap to me!

Trading at less than 25 times earnings, James Beard reckons this is one of the cheapest stocks around. And it’s…

Read more »

Young female hand showing five fingers.
Investing Articles

Down 21% in 2026, Reckitt shares are now offering a 5% dividend yield

It’s quite rare for consumer staples companies to offer yields of 5%. So could there be an opportunity here for…

Read more »

Black woman using smartphone at home, watching stock charts.
Investing Articles

UK investors are piling into a Magnificent 7 stock and it isn’t Nvidia

Nvidia's been the most popular Mag 7 stock in recent years. However, right now, investors are gravitating towards another Big…

Read more »

Mature black woman at home texting on her cell phone while sitting on the couch
Investing Articles

How many investments do you need in your Stocks and Shares ISA?

The best way to protect a Stocks and Shares ISA from permanent losses is through diversification. But how many investments…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Warren Buffett once said he’d put 100% of his net worth in this stock. How’s that worked out?

Warren Buffett said in 2009 that Wells Fargo was the company he’d put all of his money in, if he…

Read more »

Content white businesswoman being congratulated by colleagues at her retirement party
Investing Articles

How big would a Stocks and Shares ISA need to be to target a monthly income of £3,253?

The UK’s average salary is £3,253 a month. But how much of this would need to be put into a…

Read more »

Content white businesswoman being congratulated by colleagues at her retirement party
Investing Articles

How much would an ISA need to double the State Pension and target £25,094 a year?

Most people rely on the State Pension for retirement — but what if you could build a second income that…

Read more »