SG Big 3 Banks Earnings Recap: NII Falls, Who's Winning in Q1?
All three beat Bloomberg consensus but also posted NII declines as SORA averaged just 1.07% in Q1 (vs 2.54% a year ago). The dividing line wasn't credit quality or margins — it was wealth management execution. And on that measure, the gap between the three is wider than the headlines suggest.
📊 Q1 2026 Scorecard for $DBS(D05.SI)$, $UOB(U11.SI)$ and. $OCBC Bank(O39.SI)$
DBS — Deposit surge + wealth machine, guidance upgraded.
Deposits +9% YoY to S$629.9B (two-thirds CASA), wealth fees at a record S$907M, AUM reaching S$492B. FY2026 profit guidance upgraded from "below 2025" to "good shot at 2025 levels." The cleanest beat of the three.
UOB — The outlier: only bank to post profit decline.
Non-interest income was the drag: fee income -8%, trading and investment income -17%. Profit was supported entirely by a 30% drop in credit allowances. CEO Wee Ee Cheong set a 2030 target to double wealth income to S$2.5B — the right direction, but current execution lags DBS and OCBC visibly. NPL at 1.5% remains the highest of the three.
OCBC — Record non-interest income + Indonesia M&A: two-pronged growth play.
Non-interest income +23% to a record S$1.61B, wealth fees +34%. Days before the print, OCBC announced its Indonesia subsidiary would acquire HSBC's retail and wealth operations in Indonesia — the region's largest population market. New CEO Tan Teck Long's strategy is taking shape: wealth expansion plus acquisitive growth.
Does Middle East tension sustain Singapore's wealth inflow advantage?
Can UOB close the gap with DBS and OCBC on non-interest income, or is the 2030 target just signalling?
If OCBC's Indonesia integration runs smoothly, does the wealth franchise re-rate by 2027?
🗳️ Community Poll — Which Bank Do You Hold Into Year-End?
I'd hold: DBS / UOB / OCBC (pick one)
Which bank is most likely to upgrade its FY2026 guidance in Q2?
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OCBC is the most probable candidate to upgrade its FY2026 guidance in the second quarter, driven by superior capital buffers and the early realization of wealth management synergies. While DBS remains the industry leader in return on equity (ROE), its high current valuation leaves less room for "Guidance Surprises" compared to OCBC's conservative baseline. For a year-end hold, DBS remains the conviction choice due to its aggressive capital return policy and dominant position in capturing the global wealth inflows triggered by Middle East tensions. It offers the most robust "Quality Alpha" in a high-interest-rate-for-longer environment.
Successful integration of Indonesian operations is the primary catalyst for an OCBC wealth franchise re-rating by 2027. By absorbing high-margin retail and wealth segments in Southeast Asia's largest economy, OCBC is effectively pivoting its valuation logic from a "Balance Sheet Bank" to a "Capital-Light Services Engine." If the 2027 completion milestones are met, the market will likely shift its valuation metric from Price-to-Book (P/B) toward a Price-to-Earnings (P/E) multiple that reflects more stable, recurring service income. This transformation positions OCBC as the most undervalued wealth play among the trio if the integration execution remains flawless.
The gap between UOB and its larger peers, DBS and OCBC, remains a structural hurdle that its 2030 target aims to address through mechanical integration rather than just signaling. While UOB's reliance on net interest income (NII) is currently high, the consolidation of regional retail acquisitions provides a tangible roadmap for fee-based growth. However, until the bank demonstrates a sustained expansion in wealth management market share that offsets its higher regional credit costs, the 2030 target will be viewed by the market as an "Execution Beta." UOB is unlikely to close the gap fully by 2030, but the trajectory suggests a narrowing that supports a valuation floor.
Geopolitical instability in the Middle East functions as a structural tailwind for Singapore, reinforcing its investment profile as a "Neutral Safe Haven." In the current 2026 environment, capital flight from volatile regions seeks jurisdictions with high legal certainty and "Friend-shoring" alignment. This inflow is not merely transitory; it is institutionalizing through the rapid establishment of family offices and sovereign wealth reallocations. This trend sustains a premium on Singapore's wealth management sector, decoupling its growth from localized Asian economic cycles and establishing a permanent moat based on global risk-aversion.
因为现在高利率红利已经慢慢结束,NII下降几乎是必然。真正决定未来增长的,已经不是贷款赚多少利息,而是谁能持续吸引亚洲资金流入。
I think Middle East tensions and global uncertainty could continue supporting Singapore’s safe-haven wealth inflow advantage. Among the local banks, DBS looks best positioned to benefit due to its scale and stronger wealth management franchise.
$ocbc bank(O39.SI)$ has interesting long-term upside if its Indonesia integration succeeds, while $UOB(U11.SI)$ still needs stronger execution in wealth and fee income growth. If I had to pick one bank most likely to upgrade FY2026 guidance again in Q2, my choice would still be DBS.
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