DBS full-year profit surged 28% to $4.15b
Fee income hit S$2.78b as led by card and wealth management.
DBS capped the volatile year on strong financial footing as profits rose 28% YoY to $4.15b (S$5.63b) in 2018 with return on equity hitting a record-high at 12.1%. In Q4, the bank’s profits rose 8% to $1.32b.
Loans rose 6% in constant-currency terms to $345b as non-trade corporate loans rose 12%. This offset a weaker 3% growth in consumer loans which took a beating from the measures to cool the property market in July. Similarly, trade loans fell 6% as maturing exposures were not replaced due to unattractive pricing.
Also read: Singapore bank loan growth to slow to 3% in 2019
Net fee income rose 6% to S$2.78b led by card fees which hit $714m and wealth management fees of $1.14b. Transaction service fees increased 5% to S$647m as a 13% rise in cash management fees was moderated by lower trade finance fees.
On the other hand, investment banking fees plunged 41% to S$128m as debt and equity capital activities took a beating from the economic uncertainties.
Also read: Singapore banks' dividend yields eclipse ASEAN peers at 5.1% in 2019
By business unit, the income of the Consumer Banking / Wealth Management (CBG/WM) rose 21% to S$5.65b from increases in all product categories led by deposits, cards and bancassurance. Institutional Banking (IBG) income grew 9% to S$5.76b from higher cash management income whilst income from Treasury Markets declined 21% to S$672m which the bank attributes to unfavourable market conditions.
Expenses rose 13% to $5.80b with ANZ representing five percentage points of the increase.
The bank’s balance sheet also remained healthy as non-performing assets fell 4% to S$5.68b in Q4 with the bad loan ratio inching down from 1.6% to 1.5%. The Common Equity Tier-1 ratio increased 0.6 percentage points QoQ to 13.9% due mainly to net profit accretion.
“The structural improvements we have made to the profitability of our franchise – a shift towards higher-returns businesses, deeper customer relationships and more nimble execution – put us in good stead to navigate the challenges of the comin