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Aerial view of Singapore’s central business district and bayfront area.

BNBB Studio | Moment | Getty Images

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s top three banks are due to report second-quarter earnings this week, and investors will be watching for any announcements on dividend payments.

Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and United Overseas Bank will report earnings on Wednesday, while the country’s largest bank DBS Group Holdings will do so on Thursday.

Here’s what analysts are expecting from the banks’ financial report cards, according to estimates compiled by Refinitiv:

Earnings estimates for Singapore banks

Bank Q2 net income Year-on-year change
DBS SGD 1.42 billion + 14.2%
OCBC SGD 1.12 billion + 53.4%
UOB SGD 948.05 million + 34.9%
Sourse: Refinitiv

The earnings reports come as Singapore reports a renewed increase in daily Covid-19 infections. Stricter social-distancing measures imposed in early-May led to a 2% economic contraction in the second quarter compared to the previous three months, according to official advance estimates.

Given the continued threat of Covid — particularly the delta variant — on the economy, Singapore banks would likely keep provisions that they have set aside for potential loan losses, analysts said.

“We do not believe banks will write back general provisions amidst the uncertain macroeconomic outlook,” said Rui Wen Lim, an equity analyst at DBS Group Research.

Some banks in the U.S. and Europe have started releasing provisions in the second quarter, which helped boost their profitability. HSBC on Monday said it released a net $719 million, thanks largely to a better economic outlook.  

Dividend payouts

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Analysts said the shares could get a further boost from higher-than-expected dividends.

Singapore’s financial regulator, Monetary Authority of Singapore, said last week it will not extend restrictions on bank dividend payments. Last year, MAS urged banks to cap dividends given the economic uncertainties during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Krishna Guha, equity analyst from investment bank Jefferies, said the MAS announcement was a surprise.

“We had expected caps to be lifted in phases. As such, complete re-instatement is a positive surprise,” Guha wrote in a report last week. He predicted that the three banks would raise dividends at least to pre-pandemic levels this year.

Jefferies has a “buy” rating on all three Singapore banks.

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