Site icon Alpha Edge Investing

PhillipCapital: Singapore Banking Monthly – Interest rates up in February

3M-SOR and 3M-SIBOR up in February

Interest rates were up slightly in February. The 3M-SOR was up 7bps MoM to 0.39% while the 3M-SIBOR was up 1bp MoM to 0.45%. The 3M-SOR is 8bps higher than its 4Q21 average of 0.31% and has improved by 18bps YoY. The 3M-SIBOR is 1bp higher than its 4Q21 average of 0.44% and has improved by 4bps YoY (Figure 1).

4Q21 RESULTS HIGHLIGHTS

Fee income grew while NIM remained stable

DBS’ FY21 earnings of S$6.8bn met our estimates as higher fee income and strong loans growth offset lower NIMs. 4Q21 DPS rose 9% to 36 cents. Full-year fee income grew by 15% YoY to a record S$3.52bn as economic and market conditions improved. NIM remained flat QoQ but declined 6bps YoY to 1.43% as a result of lower market interest rates as customer deposits grew 3% QoQ to S$502bn. Management guided similar FY22e NIMs of 145-150bps.

OCBC’s FY21 earnings of S$4.86bn met our estimates despite higher-than-expected allowances which were offset by higher net interest income. 4Q21 DPS rose 12% to 28 cents. Full-year fee income grew 12% YoY to a record S$2.25bn from broad-based fee growth on the back of higher transaction volumes and customer activities. NII grew 4% YoY and 2% QoQ led by loan growth of 8% YoY and 2% QoQ while NIMs remained flat QoQ at 1.52%.

UOB’s FY21 earnings of S$4.08bn missed our estimates by 6% due to lower-than-expected trading and investment income. 4Q21 DPS was stable at 60 cents. Full-year fee income grew 21% YoY to a record S$2.41bn, driven by double-digit growth in most activities. NII grew 5% QoQ and 11% YoY, led by continued loans growth of 2% QoQ and 10% YoY, while NIM improved 1bp this quarter to 1.56%.

GP writebacks made the difference in 4Q21

DBS’ 4Q21 total allowances were significantly lower YoY but higher QoQ due to a lower write-back in GPs. Full-year allowances fell 98% YoY to S$52mn due to repayments of weaker exposure, credit upgrades and transfers to non-performing assets resulting in general allowance write-backs during the year. Full-year credit cost of 12bps is below pre-pandemic levels. Management has guided similar allowances for FY22e.

OCBC made SPs of S$387mn during the quarter, which is 109% higher than 3Q21’s SPs of S$185mn. This increase was mainly driven by project financing delays due to supply chain disruption brought about by COVID-19. However, OCBC was able to write back GPs of S$70mn during the quarter mainly due to downgrade of accounts to ECL stage 3 allowances, and refresh of the macroeconomic variables in the ECL model. OCBC has guided credit costs of 20-25bps for FY22e compared with FY21’s credit costs of 29bps.

UOB’s GP write-back of S$76mn in 4Q21 resulted in full-year GPs reducing by 90% YoY to S$95mn. Credit costs on allowances dropped by 8bps QoQ to 12bps. Full-year credit costs were lower by 37bps at 20bps as FY20 included pre-emptive allowance for non-impaired loans. Total general allowance for loans, including RLARs, were prudently maintained at 1% of performing loans. UOB has guided credit cost of 20-25bps for FY22e due to lower SPs.

Exit mobile version