Bangkok Post

OCBC profit slumps as loan-loss provisions surge

- ANSHUMAN DAGA

Southeast Asia’s second-largest lender Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) yesterday flagged a weak outlook after doubling loan-loss provisions for the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic and posted a 43% slump in first-quarter net profit.

The worse-than-expected performanc­e was the Singapore bank’s lowest quarterly profit in seven years as it joined larger rival DBS Group

Holdings Ltd and global banks in building defences against credit losses as a result of the pandemic.

“Even if there is a stabilisat­ion by the end of this year, a strong recovery is unlikely until 2021,” chief executive Samuel Tsien said in a media call.

He said OCBC was buiding allowances for both impaired and non-impaired assets to factor in the weak nearterm economic outlook.

OCBC’s net profit fell to S$698 million (US$494 million) in the three months to March 31, from S$1.23 billion a year earlier and well below an average estimate of S$941 million from four analysts, according to Refinitiv data.

Singapore’s trade-reliant economy is expected to suffer the worst recession in its history as economic and consumer activity slumps in the face of government restrictio­ns on travel.

Last year Singapore banks had forecast muted earnings growth for 2020 on softening interest rates and more moderate lending after strong performanc­e over the past few years.

OCBC said provisions for credit losses swelled to S$657 million from S$249 million a year earlier, building a buffer for “stresses expected against the recessiona­ry market outlook”.

It also cited allowances for a Singapore oil trader without disclosing the name of the company.

The oil and gas sector accounted for 5% of OCBC’s S$271 billion loan book.

Kevin Kwek, a senior analyst at research firm Sanford C. Bernstein in Singapore, said OCBC’s earnings “are always more volatile than those of other local lenders — particular­ly in times of market volatility — because of its insurance subsidiary.’’

Profit contributi­on from OCBC’s insurance business plunged 94% to S$18 million from a year earlier, the bank said.

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