Macquarie share price tumbles 4% to 9-week low. Is it time to pounce?

The investment bank is becoming increasingly global, maintaining a cautious stance in response to the current environment.

| More on:
A little boy takes a flying leap over a ditch.

Image source: Getty Images

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

Key points

  • The Macquarie share price has fallen again
  • It just hit a nine-week low as investors trade after the FY22 result
  • Macquarie's profit jumped in FY22, though some analysts think that was the highest it's going to be

The Macquarie Group Ltd (ASX: MQG) share price has dropped approximately 4%, meaning the bank just fell to a nine-week low.

The business is seeing a decline, as is the wider ASX share market. The S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) is currently down around 1%. ASX shares are following on from the decline that the international share market saw on Friday.

What's impacting the Macquarie share price?

Aside from the ongoing market volatility amid the focus on inflation and interest rates, Macquarie announced its FY22 result on Friday.

The investment bank is becoming increasingly global. In FY22, international income was 75% of total income.

It reported that FY22 net profit after tax (NPAT) was $4.7 billion. That represented an increase of 56% year on year.

The FY22 second-half profit of $2.66 billion was 30% higher than the first half of FY22 and up 31% compared to the second half of FY21.

It also said that its assets under management (AUM) increased by 37% to $774.8 billion over the year.

Macquarie's financial position "comfortably exceeds regulatory minimum requirements" with $10.7 billion of surplus capital. The bank's common equity tier 1 (CET) ratio was 11.5%.

The investment bank said that it continues to maintain a cautious stance, with a conservative approach to capital, funding and liquidity which will help it respond to the current environment.

Outlook

Macquarie CEO Shemara Wikramanayake said:

Macquarie remains well-positioned to deliver superior performance in the medium term. This is due to our deep expertise in major markets, strength in business and geographic diversity and ability to adapt the portfolio mix to changing market conditions, an ongoing program to identify cost saving initiatives and efficiency, a strong and conservative balance sheet, and a proven risk management framework and culture.

Is the Macquarie share price an opportunity?

The market is very mixed on the business.

Morgan Stanley says it's a buy, with a price target of $245. That implies a possible upside of more than 30%. It thinks that Macquarie is placed well to do well from the flow of capital into green opportunities. The broker thinks that Macquarie can continue to do well in the current environment.

Another broker that's positive on the business is Morgans, with a buy rating and a price target of $215. That's a possible upside of around 20% over the next year.

Citi is one of the brokers that is neutral on the Macquarie share price, with a price target of $187, implying a slight upside. It thinks that earnings generated by Macquarie's commodity division will settle down, likely impacting profits in the next few years.

But there's one broker that is fairly negative. Credit Suisse rates Macquarie as 'underperform'. It thinks the FY22 result is the best that profit is going to be. The rising interest rate environment could be a negative for the global investment bank, potentially hurting asset values.

On Credit Suisse's numbers, the Macquarie share price has a valuation of 18x FY23's estimated earnings.

However, Morgan Stanley's more optimistic outlook puts Macquarie shares at 17x FY23's estimated earnings.

Citigroup is an advertising partner of The Ascent, a Motley Fool company. Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Macquarie Group Limited. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Financial Shares

Two brokers analysing stocks.
Financial Shares

Here is the earnings forecast to 2026 for Macquarie shares

The investment bank is predicted to make strong earnings in the coming years.

Read more »

Man pointing at a blue rising share price graph.
Financial Shares

How is this ASX 200 financial stock popping 6% today?

This lucky company has just swung into the green in 2024...

Read more »

Two male ASX 200 analysts stand in an office looking at various computer screens showing share prices
Financial Shares

AMP share price falls on first-quarter update

How did AMP perform during the first quarter?

Read more »

A young woman sits with her hand to her chin staring off to the side thinking about her investments.
Financial Shares

Why the Macquarie share price could soar 16% on an overlooked factor

A double-edge sword might be Macquarie's secret weapon for huge upside.

Read more »

Smiling elderly couple looking at their superannuation account, symbolising retirement.
Financial Shares

Suncorp share price hits new 52-week high amid $375m asset sale

Suncorp is offloading another asset as it reshapes its business.

Read more »

A young man goes over his finances and investment portfolio at home.
Financial Shares

Are IAG shares worth buying right now?

IAG shares have climbed high, but is there further to go?

Read more »

A man with long hair and tattoos holds out an EFTPOS payment machine from behind a shop counter.
Financial Shares

1 dirt-cheap ASX stock I'd buy as Aussie cash carrier looks for a lifeline

Every crisis comes with an opportunity. I reckon this payments company is in the buy zone as cash crumbles.

Read more »

A young male investor wearing a white business shirt screams in frustration with his hands grasping his hair after ASX 200 shares fell rapidly today and appear to be heading into a stock market crash
Financial Shares

Why is this ASX 300 stock crashing 23% today?

Shareholders of this stock have been hit with some bad news.

Read more »