UOB beats forecasts with 28% rise in Q2 profit; CEO sees private home prices falling 5-10%

Total expenses for the quarter gained 10 per cent from a year ago to $1.02 billion, primarily from staff expenses and planned IT-related investments. PHOTO: ST FILE

SINGAPORE - UOB chief executive officer Wee Ee Cheong said Singapore's private home prices could fall 5-10 per cent in time, following the recent property cooling measures by the government, calling it his "gut feel".

But Mr Wee added in a media briefing on Friday morning (Aug 3) that while housing loan activity may drop in response to the cooling measures, this is not expected to hit the bank's home loans growth for now, given the progressive drawdown of loans booked previously.

The bank has kept its 2018 home loans growth forecast of 6-7 per cent.

Mr Wee's remarks came after UOB on Friday reported a 28 per cent rise in net profit for the second quarter that was lifted by stronger overall operating income, and announced plans to ramp up its digital strategy with a digital bank due for launch in its key South-east Asian markets.

Net profit for the three months ended June 30, 2018 stood at $1.08 billion, up from $845 million. This beats estimates provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence of $967 million. The net profit translates to annualised earnings per share of $2.51, up from $2 a year ago.

UOB shares rose in early morning trading by 1.76 per cent to $27.17, gaining 47 cents as at 9.15am. Shares of DBS were up 0.15 per cent to $26.54, and that of OCBC climbed 1.68 per cent to $11.53, also riding on broader market gains on Friday.

UOB said its net interest income grew 14 per cent to $1.54 billion, supported by loan growth of 10 per cent and an improvement in net interest margin (NIM) by eight basis points (bps) to 1.83 per cent.

Non-interest income was up 6 per cent to $800 million, as stronger fee income was slightly offset by a weaker gain from investment securities. Net fee and commission income rose 11 per cent to $498 million, though other non-interest income decreased by 3 per cent to $302 million.

Total expenses for the quarter gained 10 per cent from a year ago to $1.02 billion, primarily from staff expenses and planned IT-related investments. The cost-to-income ratio for the quarter stood at 43.6 per cent.

The bank said separately on Friday that it would launch a digital bank in its key Asean markets, with an aim to grow a base of three to five million customers in the next five years. The digital bank will be operated at a "steady-state" cost-to-income ratio of 35 per cent, it said.

BT understands it is expected to look at the five markets of Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, with the bank sharpening its focus on mobile-savvy customers, by "(wrapping) technology in the human touch".

It said it would use a "unique data-centric business model", that taps the entire customer life cycle comprehensively. UOB will rely on its in-house digital technology development, as well as its collaboration with fintech partners such as its recent joint venture with credit assessment firm Avatec.ai, and its investment and partnership with data analytics firm Personetics.

On its quarterly results, UOB said allowances halved to $90 million in the second quarter from a year ago, with the year-ago quarter including higher allowances were mainly driven by specific allowance set aside for non-performing loans (NPL) from the oil-and-gas and shipping sectors.

The NPL ratio for the quarter stood at 1.7 per cent, up from 1.5 per cent.

The bank has declared an interim dividend of 50 cents per share, up from 35 cents per share.

BT understands that UOB CEO Wee Ee Cheong is likely to flag near-term uncertainties for the global economy and Singapore in a media briefing on Friday morning. These would likely include trade tensions between US and China, a slowing Chinese economy, as well as the impact of Singapore's latest property cooling measures.

DBS on Thursday reported an 18 per cent gain in net profit for the second quarter that missed estimates on the street, as stronger net interest income was offset in part by a fall in non-interest income on lower trading income. The bank has dialled back its property loans growth forecast by $1 billion, given that last month's cooling measures are expected to hit sentiment.

DBS's treasury markets income for the second quarter also dropped 59 per cent from a year ago to $107 million, due to a "perfect storm" of widened Asian credit spreads on the back of trade tensions, a flattened yield curve impacting its bond holdings, as well as the equity market sell-off.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, DBS chief Piyush Gupta noted that with US-China trade tensions, "the biggest problem...is the spillover impact".

"That links back to the treasury markets business. The spillover impact really winds up with the confidence issue; it's a market psychology issue more than what really happens to the underlying trade flows," he said.

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