May 29, 2009 
Philippines Banks 
Overweight an Often 
Overlooked Market 
Initiate on Philippine banks with Attractive view: we 
see upside risk from solid growth, increasing returns and 
a recovery in investment markets. The Philippines offers 
positive demographics, vast remittances flows, liquid 
balance sheets and typical emerging market challenges 
and opportunities. Low investor interest has meant low 
liquidity – a vicious cycle. However, we see a range of 
investment themes – quality (BPI), market leverage 
(MBT), and a longer-term integration play (BDO). 
BPI Overweight, P44.50, 12-month PT P55 … quality: 
BPI is trading on 17x EPS, 2.2x book, with a three-year 
earnings CAGR of 27% and ROE of 13% on our FY09 
estimates. We believe BPI offers a high-quality play on 
Philippines’ under-owned, emerging market. BPI has a 
strong and highly liquid balance sheet - Tier I of 12.7%, 
NPL ratio at 3.9%, and 97% of funding from deposits. 
MBT Overweight, P33.00 12-month PT P53 … market 
leverage: MBT is trading on 14x EPS, 0.9x book, with a 
three-year earnings CAGR of 33%. We expect ROA to 
recover with improved investment markets. Tier I is 
ample at 10.0%. The discount to peers partly reflects its 
greater sensitivity to investment markets and subdued 
growth and returns over recent years. However, we 
expect the gap to narrow as markets recover. MBT is the 
highest leveraged play on investment market recovery. 
BDO Equal-weight, P32.50 12-month PT P36 … 
indigestion risk: BDO is trading on 20x EPS, 1.2x book, 
with a three-year earnings CAGR of 57% on our FY09 
estimates. The share price appears to discount 
concerns on capital management, asset quality, and 
integration. Tier I is 8.5%, and at risk if growth 
momentum is sustained. BDO has a large unseasoned 
book that has grown at a pace well above the system. 
We would like to see a period of consolidation to avoid 
any indigestion risk from rapid growth and acquisition. 
Risks to our call … 1) No investment market recovery; 
2) credit cycle worse than expected; 3) global recession 
hits remittances and domestic growth story falters. 
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