Dacai
2026.05.06 00:59

OCBC may rival DBS’s yoy performance. It is the majority shareholder of Great Eastern which can funnel high-networth clients to its private banking subsidiary Bank of Singapore. Last year, OCBC reported double-digit growth in wealth management fees and non-interest income. With the war, wealth is flowing out of the Middle East. Singapore is seen as a safer haven so strong banks like DBS and OCBC will attract net new money.

I think OCBC will continue its capital return program by doing share buyback.

Longbridge - Hotspot
Hotspot

SG Bank Earnings Round 2: Can UOB + OCBC Match the Bar DBS Just Set?

DBS just printed a record income quarter, kept the 15-cent capital return dividend, and still has SGD 2.6B of buyback firepower left through 2027. The bar is high. This week, UOB and OCBC have to answer it — and both are walking into the same headwind: a falling-rate world that's chewing into NIM.

Two reports. Two very different questions.

🗓️ Wednesday, May 7 — $UOB(U11.SG)

The most NIM-exposed of the big three. Consensus net profit ~SGD 1.4B (–8% YoY, –3% QoQ). Management's own 2026 NIM guide: 1.75%–1.80% — already below where DBS just printed (1.89%). Three things to watch:

- Can wealth + cards + treasury offset the NIM squeeze? UOB's non-interest income engine grew 20%+ in 2024 — Q1 will tell us if that flywheel is still spinning.

- Credit costs: management guided 25–30 bps for the year. Anything above and the regional/SME exposure story gets harder.

- Capital return signal: DBS just normalised the "extra dividend on top of payout" playbook. Will UOB follow with anything beyond a routine interim?

UOB has been the cheapest of the three on P/B for months. A clean Q1 changes that overnight.

🗓️ Thursday, May 8 — $OCBC Bank(O39.SG)

The special-dividend story. Consensus net profit ~SGD 1.80B (–4.5% YoY, +3.0% QoQ), NIM compressing to ~1.82%, and management has reaffirmed the 50% payout ratio. The thing investors actually want to know:

- Does OCBC declare a special dividend / capital return? This is the single biggest catalyst on the call. The Street has been pricing in optionality; results day is when the optionality cashes — or doesn't.

- Wealth franchise: OCBC has been quietly leading the big three on wealth growth. Q1 is the test for whether that's still a structural story or a 2024 high-water mark.

- 2026 guidance refresh: in February, OCBC guided "stable to rising" income for 2026. Whether that survives a quarter of NIM compression matters more than the EPS print itself.

Of the three, OCBC has the cleanest "buy on capital return news" setup if the special dividend lands.

📊 The Benchmark — DBS Just Reported (Apr 30)

For context, here's what UOB and OCBC are being measured against:

- Net profit: SGD 2.93B (+1% YoY, +24% QoQ — beat)

- Total income: record SGD 5.95B

- NIM: 1.89% (–23 bps YoY)

- Dividend: 81 cents total (66c ordinary + 15c capital return)

- Buyback: SGD 400M done, SGD 2.6B remaining through 2027

DBS made it look easy by leaning on wealth, deposit growth, and capital discipline. The question for UOB and OCBC is whether the same playbook works at their scale.

💡 Bottom Line

The 2026 SG bank thesis just narrowed to one question: who has the capital to keep returning it to shareholders while NIM compresses? DBS already answered. UOB and OCBC have 48 hours to make their case. By Friday, you'll know which of the three deserves the overweight in your STI sleeve.

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Who's your top SG bank pick?

Single Choice

  • DBS — record-setting machine, premium valuation
  • UOB — deep value, biggest NIM risk
  • OCBC — special dividend optionality
  • Watching the sector from the sidelines
110 people voted3 天后结束

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