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DBS Results Out

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katak88
    11-Nov-2010 11:41  
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*NEW ISSUE- DBS Bank Ltd SGD Tier 1 Pref Share - PUBLIC OFFER *

Issuer:                   DBS Bank Ltd (Aa1/AA-/AA-).
Securities:             SGD Reg S Fixed Rate Non-Cumulative
                           Non-Convertible  Non-Voting Preference Shares
Capital Treatment: Tier 1 capital. Ranks junior to Tier 2 capital
                        and senior to ordinary share capital
Dividend Deferral:      Subject to Singapore regulations (with dividend stopper language)
Issue Ratings:           A3/A/A (Moody's/S&P/Fitch) 
Issue Size:             SGD 500mio (option to increase up to 800mio)
                        Placement: up to SGD 250mio offered to institutional investors
                        Reserve Offer: up to SGD 50mio to directors,management and 
employees of DBS Group and its  subsidiaries                       (Placement plus Reserve Offer capped at SGD 250mio)     

Settlement:             22 November 2010 (to be confirmed)
Maturity:               Perpetual
Issuer Call:             At par, on any date on or after 22 November 2020
Regulatory Call:         At par at any time after a Change of Qualification Event is continuing. (Please see OIS)            

Dividend Rate:           4.70% per annum
Issue Price:             100.3 
Liquidation Preference: SGD 250,000
Listing:                 Singapore
Clearing:               CDP/Euroclear/Clearstream
Governing Law:          Singapore 
Selling Restrictions:   As per OIS (The OIS has been lodged with the MAS)
Use of Proceeds:     To refinance the DBS preference shares that are
                        callable in 2011
. (Please see OIS)
Sole Lead and Books:    DBS Bank Ltd.
 
 
katak88
    11-Nov-2010 11:32  
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DBS to sell up to $800m preference shares in small lots 
WRITTEN BY THOMSON REUTERS   
WEDNESDAY, 10 NOVEMBER 2010 13:53


 DBS Group (DBSM.SI), Singapore’s largest bank, said on Wednesday it will issue up to $800 million worth of preference shares that will qualify as Tier 1 capital to retail investors.

“The purpose of the issue is for the DBS Group to exercise the calls on its outstanding Tier 1 instruments which are callable in 2011,” the bank said in a statement.

The money raised will also strengthen DBS’s capital base to support its growth initiatives, it added.
 
The non-cumulative, non-convertible and non-voting preference shares pay an annual dividend of 4.7% and will be sold to retail investors in units of $100 each. The shares will be traded on the Singapore Exchange.
 
DBS last month issued $1.7 billion worth of preference shares to institutional investors as part of a capital restructuring exercise and to replace a US$1.1 billion ($1.42 billion) existing preference share issue that is callable next year.
 
The institutional tranche, which trades over the counter, also pays an annual dividend of 4.7%.
 
 
rickyw
    10-Nov-2010 16:10  
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sorry..bit lost, what's that mean? then what is the impact for current stock?

zhangwuji      ( Date: 10-Nov-2010 15:06) Posted:

SINGAPORE, Nov 10 - DBS Group <DBSM.SI>, Singapore's largest bank, said on Wednesday it will issue up to S$800 million worth of preference shares that will qualify as Tier 1 capital to retail investors.

 

 
zhangwuji
    10-Nov-2010 15:06  
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SINGAPORE, Nov 10 - DBS Group <DBSM.SI>, Singapore's largest bank, said on Wednesday it will issue up to S$800 million worth of preference shares that will qualify as Tier 1 capital to retail investors.
 
 
hlfoo2010
    08-Nov-2010 16:07  
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In 2010  dividend paid 3 times already, so yr end 2010  no dividend ???.

So holiday in JB ?????????.

 

Time Price Trade Size Bid-Ask
15:53:10 14.180 1,000 Bought from Seller
15:51:49 14.169 11,000 Others*
15:51:48 14.160 5,000 Sold to Buyer
15:51:48 14.160 38,000 Bought from Seller
15:51:02 14.160 5,000 Bought from Seller
15:50:44 14.140 5,000 Sold to Buyer
15:50:41 14.140 5,000 Sold to Buyer
15:50:26 14.140 1,000 Sold to Buyer
15:50:13 14.160 1,000 Bought from Seller
15:49:01 14.160 1,000 Bought from Seller
15:48:41 14.140 3,000 Sold to Buyer
15:48:32 14.160 45,000 Bought from Seller
15:46:57 14.140 1,000 Sold to Buyer
15:46:56 14.160 1,000 Bought from Seller
15:45:45 14.140 1,000 Sold to Buyer
15:45:42 14.140 1,000 Sold to Buyer
15:45:19 14.140 1,000 Sold to Buyer
15:45:16 14.160 2,000 Bought from Seller
15:45:09 14.160 1,000 Bought from Seller
15:43:38 14.140 25,000 Bought from Seller
15:43:36 14.140 1,000 Bought from Seller
15:43:20 14.140 37,000 Bought from Seller
15:42:59 14.160 50,000 Bought from Seller
15:42:40 14.140 90,000 Others*
15:42:27 14.120 2,000 Sold to Buyer
Look strange??? why????
 
 
rickyw
    08-Nov-2010 12:10  
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is bcos not paying dividend DBS price going down? must be kidding...
 

 
chew8888
    05-Nov-2010 10:24  
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DBS has changed the dividend payout schedule to half yearly, rather than quarterly.
 
 
Richman
    04-Nov-2010 23:52  
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Dividend to be comfirmed
 
 
stock012
    04-Nov-2010 23:27  
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wah.. this babe tis quarter never give divd... record profit some more...
 
 
rickyw
    04-Nov-2010 17:15  
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chiong ahh...
 

 
katak88
    04-Nov-2010 09:03  
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DBS posts record quarterly profit as bad debts fall 

THURSDAY, 04 NOVEMBER 2010 08:33   WRITTEN BY THOMSON REUTERS 

DBS (DBSM.SI), Southeast Asia’s biggest lender, posted a record quarterly profit on Thursday and joined rivals in beating expectations as falling bad debts and strong trading income helped it overcome low interest rates.

But weak margins on loans at Singapore banks due to low US rates and an expected economic slowdown in the months ahead could slow the pace of earnings recovery this year.

“This year we have been able to leverage the strength of our customer franchise to expand our loan book and increase cross-sell, thus mitigating the effects of headwinds in a low rate market,” CEO Piyush Gupta said in a statement. 

“Going forward, we will continue to focus single-mindedly on execution so as to consistently deliver quality earnings.

DBS posted a net profit of $722 million in July-September against $563 million a year earlier, up 28%.

That compared with an average forecast of $645 million, according to seven analysts surveyed by Reuters.

Bad debts declined 26% to $195 million from a year earlier.

DBS’s smaller rivals Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC.SI) and United Overseas Bank (UOBH.SI) have both announced better-than-expected quarterly earnings.

Asian banks have benefited from the region’s strong economic recovery which has helped reduce bad debts and boosted loan growth.

DBS said loans grew 15% in the third quarter from a year earlier, faster than UOB’s 8.7% expansion, but slower than OCBC’s 29% growth.

Net interest income, however, dropped 5% to $1.08 billion as net interest margins declined by 23 basis points, compared with an 18-basis-point decline for OCBC and 32 basis points for UOB.

Fee and commission income for DBS fell 6% to $340 million, while trading income more than doubled to $235 million.

The revival of Singapore’s IPO market this year is expected to help DBS earn more investment bank fees as it advised on the share sale of Global Logistic Properties’ (GLPL.SI) US$3 billion ($3.9 billion) and Mapletree Industrial Trust’s (MAPI.SI) US$720 million listing.

Singapore bank shares have underperformed the broader market this year as investors are concerned about weak margins as well as an economic slowdown in the next few quarters after a strong first half.

DBS shares are down 8.4% so far this year, underperforming both its rivals. UOB shares are down about 6% while OCBC, which has been bolstered by its private bank, is the only Singapore bank in the black this year, up 2.2%.



The overall Singapore index <.FTSTI> has climbed about 11% since the start of the year. 

 
 
katak88
    04-Nov-2010 08:57  
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DBS profit beats analysts’ estimates on loan growth 

THURSDAY, 04 NOVEMBER 2010 08:11    WRITTEN BY BLOOMBERG

DBS Group Holdings, Southeast Asia’s biggest bank, reported third-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates as loan growth outweighed narrowing interest margins.

Net income climbed 28% to a record $722 million in the three months ended Sept. 30, from $563 million a year earlier, the Singapore-based company said in a statement today. That beat the $655.3 million average of nine estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

DBS, led by Chief Executive Officer Piyush Gupta, is benefiting from a revival in credit growth as Asia’s economic expansion outpaces the rest of the world. That has spurred profit even as income from lending is crimped by low borrowing costs in Singapore and Hong Kong.

“Stronger loan momentum, and evidence that some fee-related initiatives are beginning to bear fruit” makes DBS a preferred pick, Robert Kong, a Singapore-based analyst at Citigroup Inc., wrote in a report on Oct 22.

Net interest income, or the difference between what the bank makes from lending and pays on deposits, rose 1% from the previous quarter to $1.1 billion. Loans rose 1%, spurred by corporate borrowing across Asia as well as home loans in Singapore. The net interest margin, a measure of loan profitability, declined four basis points to 1.8%.

Total loans in Singapore rose 12.1% from a year earlier to $309.4 billion in September, data from the Monetary Authority of Singapore show.



Non-interest income fell 2% from the previous quarter to $730 million, dragged down by a drop in loan-related fees, DBS said. Investment banking revenue rose, while trading income growth slowed, the statement said. 

 
 
katak88
    02-Aug-2010 23:28  
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Published July 31, 2010

DBS moves on, taking a $1b impairment charge

Writedown for HK unit puts it $300m in the red, but will not affect cash flow or liquidity

 

By SIOW LI SEN

 

(Singapore)DBS Group - with a new CEO in charge - tidied up its books and took a $1 billion impairment charge for its Hong Kong unit. This led the bank to post a surprise $300 million loss for the second quarter, and marks the second time it has taken an impairment charge for its Hong Kong business.

 

 


Before the charge, earnings were up 30 per cent to $718 million, mainly due to a 56 per cent drop in allowances to $204 million.

The charge has no impact on cash flow, liquidity or DBS's ability to pay dividends nor regulatory capital because goodwill was deducted from regulatory capital on consolidation. DBS yesterday declared a 14-cent dividend, unchanged from the previous quarter, a yield of 3.9 per cent on yesterday's $14.40 closing, down 10 cents.

South-east Asia's largest bank said the charge reduces the carrying value of DBS Bank (Hong Kong) to $8.4 billion, equivalent to 2.2 times its book value as at June 30. In 2005, DBS took a $1.13 billion impairment charge for DBS Hong Kong. DBS bought the then Dao Heng Bank in 2001 for $10 billion, paying more than three times what it was worth.

Chief executive Piyush Gupta said the impairment charge decision came after a regular review which showed that structural changes have increased the likelihood of margin compression for DBS Hong Kong.

Since the financial crisis, US dollar funding has shrunk and mainland China banks have come to Hong Kong as their funding base, he said. This made retail deposits more expensive.

'When you look at your projected cash flows from what the business is likely to make, it has directed us to moderate our expectations for future cash flows,' said Mr Gupta. Still, DBS remains positive on its Hong Kong prospects, and has made progress on initiatives to expand its business there, he said.

Turning to the group's performance for the second quarter, he said DBS managed to grow its loan book, mitigating the fall in interest margin.

Net interest income was down 4 per cent to $1.07 billion as net interest margin fell 9 basis points to 1.84 per cent.

The total loan book grew 9 per cent from the previous quarter to $146.07 billion or 12 per cent in the first half. Business loans made up over 80 per cent or $10 billion of the increase with housing loans at $2 billion. Its market share of Singapore dollar loans grew one per cent to 22.4 per cent. Mr Gupta said DBS has been gaining market share not by dropping prices as a lot of the new home loans were three-year, fixed-rate loans.

DBS's non-interest income was $748 million, up 10 per cent on the year and 16 per cent from the previous quarter. This came from better wealth management and credit card revenues. Trading income grew 21 per cent from the previous quarter to $278 million. The rise was driven by customer revenues, which grew 45 per cent and accounted for more than half of total trading income. Investment gains doubled to $98 million as there were increased opportunities for profit-taking of debt securities.

Expenses rose 2 per cent from the previous quarter to $717 million. The cost-income ratio was little changed at 40 per cent.

Non-performing loan rate fell from 2.7 per cent to 2.3 per cent. Return on equity was 11.1 per cent and return on assets was 1.07 per cent, compared with 8.2 per cent and 0.82 per cent respectively in the previous quarter.

Looking ahead, Mr Gupta said: 'Our view is that there will be a slowdown for the second half across the board. The slowdown is already visible.' DBS was 'unlikely' to repeat the double-digit loan growth in the second half of the year, he added.

Singapore's economy galloped at a blistering 18 per cent pace in the first six months, but this is expected to slow down considerably in the second half.

 
 
katak88
    30-Jul-2010 22:08  
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Singapore  
July 30, 2010, 8.18 am (Singapore time)

Update: DBS posts Q2 loss after surprise HK goodwill charge




 

SINGAPORE - DBS Group, Southeast Asia's biggest bank, posted a surprise quarterly loss, its first in almost five years, after it took a S$1.02 billion (US$748.9 million) goodwill charge for its Hong Kong business.

 

But excluding the one-time charge, core earnings rose 30 per cent, beating market expectations, and the bank said its outlook remained healthy.

Related links:

Click here for DBS's news release

Performance summary

CEO presentation

Presentation


Analysts said there may be more room for writedowns on its Hong Kong business, which is a legacy from 2001 when DBS took over Dao Heng bank in an expensive US$5.8 billion deal.

'DBS could have written down more on Dao Heng,' said Sanjay Jain, a regional banking analyst at Credit Suisse.

He estimated that the Hong Kong unit was still carrying a good will of S$4.5 billion, against a book value of S$3.8 billion on DBS's books.

DBS said it remains bullish on North Asia's prospects.

'Notwithstanding the goodwill impairment, we remain structurally bullish on prospects for Hong Kong and China, which are integral to the Asia growth story,' CEO Piyush Gupta said in a statement.

This is the second major writedown on the Hong Kong business since 2005. The latest charge brings down the value of its Hong Kong operation to 2.2 times from a previous 2.5 times book.

DBS said there have been 'noticable and persistent strains'in wholesale funding markets, which is forcing banks to adjust their funding starategies.

Jain at Credit Suisse said the results were better-than-expected helped by strong trading income, driven by client flows instead of properietary trading. Loan growth also exceeded expectations, he said.

Singapore banks have survived the financial crisis in good shape, but are struggling to take full advantage of fast loan-growth and reduced loan-losses this year due to historically low rates.

DBS said net interest income fell almost 4 per cent to S$1.07 billion, although loans in the second quarter expanded 14 per cent from a year ago. Net interest margins declined 17 basis points from a year ago.

DBS CEO Gupta, who took charge last November, is under pressure from investors not only to deliver strong earnings, but also expand the bank's footprint beyond its core Singapore and Hong Kong market.

But with money market rates languishing near record lows, DBS is more vulnerable than its rivals due to its dominant position in the interbank market.

DBS said on Friday its April-June net profit was S$718 million - its best ever - if the goodwill impairment was excluded, which was an improvement of 30 per cent versus S$552 million a year ago.

Analysts had predicted a net profit of S$564 million, according to the average of eight forecasts in a Reuters survey.

DBS shares have fallen about 6 per cent so far this year while rival Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp is down 0.9 per cent and United Overseas Bank is up 0.9 per cent. The benchmark Singapore index is up about 3 per cent. -- REUTERS
 
 
leoleo
    30-Jul-2010 10:05  
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net profit beat expectation up 30% , give it up !
 

 
awchyeong
    30-Jul-2010 09:18  
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up 10cents now. no change to buy cheap today
 
 
leoleo
    30-Jul-2010 00:00  
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if Dow red ,tmr this counter sure die.if dow green tmr this counter also die ,let wait n see.
 
 
lesliesiaky
    11-May-2010 20:52  
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56 cent.
 
 
leoleo
    08-May-2010 14:58  
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dbs will implement semi-annual payout div fr 2nd half then will get 28 cents or 56 cents per year base on current 14 cents per quarter any expert can advise..?
 
 
katak88
    08-May-2010 00:05  
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Business Times - 07 May 2010


Update: DBS Q1 net profit up 23%; above consensus

SINGAPORE - DBS, Southeast Asia's biggest bank, said it was seeing good momentum for its business after posting a 23 per cent rise in quarterly profit on higher fees and trading income, and smaller bad-debt charges.

Related links:

Click here for DBS's news release

Presentation

Performance Summary


The result, which was slightly above forecasts, came two days after rival OCBC reported bumper profits and showed how an economic rebound could help turn around earnings this year for Singapore banks.

Investors hope chief executive Piyush Gupta, who took over in November, will get DBS, which makes most of its money from Singapore and Hong Kong, to boost earnings from the rest of Asia.

But analysts do not see a quick fix for the bank which faces regulatory bottlenecks that may prevent it from expanding aggressively in China, India and Malaysia. DBS also needs an acquisition strategy to increase its footprint in Indonesia, analysts say.

Mr Gupta is also making a big push into wealth management which was underscored by his recent hire of Morgan Stanley's influential private banker Tan Su Shan.

'DBS has had good momentum so far, and in the months to come, we will continue to single-mindedly execute against strategy so as to become a leading Asian bank,' Mr Gupta, a former Citibanker, said in a statement.

DBS said on Friday its Jan-March net profit was S$532 million (US$380 million) versus S$433 million a year ago, its best quarterly profit since the third quarter of 2009.

Analysts had predicted a net profit of S$523 million, according to the average of five forecasts in a Reuters survey.

DBS said its net interest income fell 1 per cent to S$1.066 billion as margins dropped, though loans grew 3 per cent, slower than OCBC's 12 per cent growth.

Fee and commission income jumped 8, while bad-debt charges fell 14 per cent to S$355 million. Net trading income jumped 27 per cent, as DBS, the biggest player in Singapore's money market, took advantage of a pickup in volumes for currencies and bonds.

Singapore bank shares have weakened this year after a sharp rally last year when financials globally recovered from a slump in 2008 triggered by the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

DBS shares have fallen about 5 per cent so far this year, against a 5 per cent drop in shares of OCBC and a 1.9 per cent drop for United Overseas Bank. The benchmark Singapore index is down 2 per cent. -- REUTERS
 
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