Reports
DBS Wealth Management Fees Shrink Nearly A Fifth
DBS Group's net fee and commission in its wealth management business dropped by 19 per cent from S$52 million ($40.9 million) to S$42 million during the three months to September 2011 as a darkening economy spooks private clients.
DBS Group, Southeast Asia’s largest bank, saw net
fee and commission in its wealth management business drop by 19
per cent from S$52 million ($40.9 million) to S$42
million during the three months to September
2011, according to the
bank’s third quarter results published today.
Although fees were down during the last
quarter, net fees and commission were up a third compared to the
same period
last year, said the bank.
The private banking and consumer division,
which earns much of its fees from accounts, deposits, loans,
cards and
investment and insurance products, saw profit before tax shrink
11 per cent to S$141 million during the third quarter compared to
the previous three months, as
margins in the region narrowed and a darkening economic climate
made clients became more risk-averse.
Net interest income declined 7 per cent to S$350 million as
higher loan volumes were offset by lower net interest margin,
said the bank.
Non-interest income rose 5 per cent to S$196 million. Overall
income dropped
marginally from S$562 million to S$546 million. Expenses were 4
per cent higher
at S$391 million as staff and non-staff costs rose, said the
bank.
Loans to customers in the
consumer/private banking business rose fractionally to S$534
million from $529 million in the previous quarter. This reflected
a growth in loans across DBS Group.
Loans increased 7 per cent during the quarter to S$186 billion,
excluding currency translation
effects. There was broad-based corporate borrowing across
the region, with trade finance accounting for slightly less than
half of loan
growth.
For the bank overall the results were
largely positive.DBS
Group recorded net profits of S$762 million for
third-quarter
2011, an increase of 6 per cent from a year ago and 4 per cent
from the
previous quarter. Business volume and customer income trends were
sustained as
total income reached a new high.
Liquidity remains healthy.
With steady deposit inflows, loan-deposit ratio is at 84 per
cent. Customer
deposits rose 4 per cent or during the quarter to S$220 billion,
bringing
growth to 19 per cent or S$35 billion over the past 12 months.
Net interest income rose 1 per
cent from the previous quarter to a record S$1.21 billion. Income
from cross-selling treasury products to corporate and
retail customers increased 15 per cent. The bank also recorded
gains of S$47 million from the merger of DBS Asset Management
with Nikko Asset Management.
Total income rose 7 per cent from the
previous quarter to S$ 1.97 billion. Investments in people
and
infrastructure for business growth resulted in a 13 per cent
increase in expenses to
S$2.4 billion. The cost-income ratio rose from 40 per cent a year
ago to 42 per cent.
“DBS continues to fire on all cylinders, achieving record
earnings for the first nine months of this year. We are
particularly pleased
with our strong third-quarter earnings, given the challenging
operating
environment, characterised by prolonged interest rate headwinds,
increasing
market volatility and macroeconomic uncertainties,” said DBS
chief executive
Piyush Gupta.