Easing Financing Receivables Growth

RCE’s 1QFY26 net profit decreased by 14% YoY to RM26m, dragged by higher impairment allowances on the back of an uptick in self-declared bankruptcy and early retirements within the civil service. Results were below expectations, accounting for 19% of our and consensus estimates. The discrepancy in our forecast was mainly due to the lower-than-expected loan disbursements. As such, we cut our earnings forecast for FY26-28F by 9-12%, as we lower our financing receivables assumption to account for RCE’s cautious lending stance and increased competition especially from digital lenders. We maintain our Neutral rating on RCE, as we are concerned of the group’s asset quality as non-performing financing (NPF) ratio is still elevated. Post earnings adjustment, our DDM derived TP is lowered to RM1.22.

  • Results review. 1QFY26 revenue grew marginally by 0.8% YoY, due to higher fee income from increased disbursements. Despite the higher revenue, RCE’s net profit declined 14% YoY to RM26m, dragged by higher credit cost given early retirement while self-declared bankruptcy trends continued to increase.
  • Financing receivables growth tapered off slightly. RCE saw its financing receivables eased marginally by 0.2% QoQ, likely due to the high base effect in 4QFY25 following salary adjustments. While credit demand is still resilient, management continues to adopt a cautious lending approach amid a challenging operating environment. Recall that the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission had earlier dismantled a financial syndicate that facilitated personal loans for blacklisted civil servants through falsified documentation. As such, we lower our financing receivables growth assumption to 1-2% for FY26-28F (from 3% previously).
  • Early signs of easing for impairments. While impairment provisions eased 25% QoQ, signaling early signs of moderation, we are still cautious on RCE’s asset quality, given the persistently high bankruptcy rate and early retirement cases within the civil service. RCE’s NPF ratio climbed to a record 4.8% reflecting ongoing concerns over the credit quality of new customers. We understand that RCE provided an additional one-off c.RM3m impairment, to reflect lower repayments following a revision in debt service ratio (DSR) treatment, which now excludes certain allowances. Previously, these allowances were factored into the 60% DSR threshold, enabling higher financing eligibility. However, the exclusion had resulted in lower financing eligibility and payroll deductions, leading to only partial repayments of financing to RCE. As such, RCE has provisioned for the impacted portion of the portfolio.