SG Bank Earnings Season | Goldman’s View: Which One Looks Promising?

Tiger_SG
04-16
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$DBS(D05.SI)$ will fire the first shot on April 30, followed by $UOB(U11.SI)$ (May 7) and $OCBC Bank(O39.SI)$ (May 8).

Goldman’s latest report gives a clear verdict: overall earnings should be “decent enough,” but the divergence among the three banks is becoming more obvious — net interest margin pressure, wealth management as a bright spot, and credit costs as the biggest hidden risk. Which one are you betting on?

Goldman Takeaway: What’s the Core Logic This Quarter?

Goldman’s overall forecast for 1Q26 is: quarter-on-quarter recovery, but mild year-on-year pressure.

Three numbers will determine the direction of share prices on earnings day: the actual decline in net interest income (NII), the resilience of wealth management fees and cost of credit (CoC)

The main drag is structural net interest margin (NIM) compression. Both SORA (Singapore Overnight Rate Average) and HIBOR (Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate) have moved lower, putting unavoidable pressure on the big three banks’ NII.

Now that global rates have peaked and begun to ease, NIM has entered a structural downtrend. The market debate is whether this decline will be a mild adjustment (soft landing) or whether profits will quickly revert(hard landing).

Goldman leans toward the former — it believes loan growth, wealth management, and cost control can offset most of the margin pressure, meaning profitability should not collapse off a cliff. But whether that view holds true will be tested in this earnings season.

How Will DBS, OCBC, and UOB Diverge?

$OCBC Bank(O39.SI)$: The Defensive Favorite, Smallest Year-on-Year Compression

Goldman expects OCBC’s earnings to decline just 0.3% YoY, making it the most resilient of the three.

Its wealth management business, through Bank of Singapore, has built a deep moat among Asia’s high-net-worth clients, giving it more stable fee income. In addition, OCBC’s balance sheet structure is relatively conservative, so its margin compression tends to be slower than peers in a falling-rate environment.

For investors who prefer a steadier profile and do not want to make a high-beta earnings-season bet, OCBC currently offers the highest level of certainty. Goldman maintains a Buy rating.

$DBS(D05.SI)$: The Flagship Name, With the Strongest Wealth Management Angle

DBS is the largest of the three by market capitalization and also the most diversified. It is Goldman’s other clear Buy-rated name.

The core investment case for DBS is that its fee income mix is more exposed than UOB and OCBC to wealth management and capital markets, both of which are seeing the strongest seasonal recovery this quarter.

Two numbers matter most for DBS this quarter: the growth rate of wealth management AUM & management’s updated guidance for full-year NIM

The latter will directly influence how the market re-prices full-year earnings expectations

$UOB(U11.SI)$: Under the Most Pressure, But Has the Valuation Already Discounted It?

Goldman expects UOB’s earnings to decline 4.4% YoY, the sharpest drop among the three, and it currently does not carry a Goldman Buy rating.

UOB’s issue is not just a one-quarter disruption, but a more structural one: its loan book has greater exposure to ASEAN markets such as Thailand, Vietnam, and Indonesia, where credit quality pressures are more visible amid falling rates and macro uncertainty.

Of course, bad news can also create opportunity — if UOB’s actual results come in better than the expected -4.4%, or if management offers constructive guidance, the stock could see a stronger-than-expected rebound.

💬 Community Discussion

Which Singapore bank are you currently holding or watching?

Where do you think the biggest earnings surprise risk lies this quarter?

Are Singapore bank stocks expensive right now?

The big three are currently trading at roughly 1.1x–1.6x P/B, with dividend yields around 5%–6%. Compared with global banks, the valuations are not exactly cheap, but they are supported by stable dividends, solid asset quality, and a predictable regulatory environment.

Do you think current valuations are fair? Or is the impact of falling margins still being underestimated?

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DBS Beats! $60 is Coming in May?
DBS reported Q1 2026 results with net profit of S$2.93B (+1% YoY), beating the Bloomberg consensus of S$2.88B. Shares closed +3.4% at S$58.50. Non-interest income and wealth management fees both hit all-time highs. Dividend raised to S$0.81/share from S$0.75 a year earlier. In a lower-rate world, DBS proved the model works — just not the way the market expected. Up next: UOB (May 7) and OCBC (May 8). Are you bullish on DBS hitting $60 in May? Does DBS earnings signal a good start for the other two?
Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.
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Comments

  • 1PC
    04-16
    1PC
    I wish I could hold All 3 [Happy] but 2 is the limit (DBS & UOB) [Happy]. They are still one of the best pairs [Heart] on my portfolio [Call] [Allin]. I hope UOB will be the dark horse 🐎 in the coming earnings report 🙏 @Shyon @Barcode @Shernice軒嬣 2000 @Aqa @koolgal @JC888 @DiAngel
  • Shyon
    04-16
    Shyon
    I’m still leaning toward $DBS(D05.SI)$ and $ocbc bank(O39.SI)$ this earnings season. It’s less about peak NIM now, and more about who can offset the pressure. DBS is my more “offensive” pick — if wealth management and capital markets recover, it has the strongest upside. The key watch is its full-year NIM guidance, which will drive re-rating.

    OCBC remains my defensive anchor. Its wealth management strength and conservative balance sheet should cushion margin pressure. If this quarter is more about managing downside than beating expectations, I think OCBC holds up better with steadier earnings.

    I’m more cautious on $UOB(U11.SI)$ due to ASEAN exposure and credit cost risks. That said, low expectations could still lead to a rebound if results surprise. Overall, valuations look fair, not cheap — yield is supportive, but NIM pressure isn’t fully priced in.

    @Tiger_SG @TigerStars @Tiger_comments @TigerClub

  • koolgal
    04-18
    koolgal
    🌟🌟🌟I am so grateful that I have invested in all 3 Singapore banks as they have shown that they are resilient and continue to grow slow and steadily over the years.   This is despite geopolitical headwinds like the current Iran war and the Trump tariffs.

    One of the biggest risks for the 3 banks is expectation of interest rate cuts which would impact their net interest margins (NIM).

    However I believe that wealth management would continue to grow exponentially for the 3 banks as Singapore is regarded as a safe haven in these turbulent times.

    In the meantime I have been rewarded with the nice juicy dividends that all 3 banks offer, which is a great source of passive income for me.

    As a Singaporean, investing in DBS, OCBC and UOB is like owning a little piece of Singapore's economic engine and the cornerstone of our country's success.

    @Tiger_SG @Tiger_comments @TigerStars @TigerClub @CaptainTiger

  • Mkoh
    04-23
    Mkoh
    OCBC has arguably become the most "promising" pick of the trio for Q1. While it traditionally played second fiddle to DBS in terms of aggressive growth, its conservative management is paying off in the current environment.
    Why it looks promising: OCBC’s share price recently touched record highs (surpassing S$22), making it the standout performer YTD. It is benefiting from the strongest loan growth among the three (nearly 7% YoY), fueled by a strategic push into ASEAN corporate lending and a resilient Singapore mortgage book. 
    The "Secret Sauce": Unlike its peers, OCBC has managed to keep its asset quality exceptionally clean, with Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) hitting multi-quarter lows. With its market cap crossing the S$100 billion mark, it is no longer just a "value play" but a primary momentum driver in the STI. 
  • FreedomBuilder
    04-18
    FreedomBuilder
    As I reflect on their role in a portfolio, I see Singapore banks not as high-growth engines, but as anchors. They provide stability, income, and moderate growth. They are the kind of investments that allow you to sleep well at night, knowing that the business is unlikely to face existential threats under normal conditions. At the same time, they are unlikely to deliver extraordinary returns without favorable macro conditions.

    For the investing community, especially those of us in Asia, there is a valuable lesson here. Not every investment needs to be exciting. In fact, the most effective long-term strategies often combine steady performers with selective growth opportunities. Singapore banks fit well into the “steady performer” category. They may not dominate headlines, but they quietly do their job year after year.

  • 這是甚麼東西
    04-17
    這是甚麼東西
    Valuation: Fairly Valued Quality
    Singapore bank stocks are not expensive, but they are no longer "deep value." Trading at Price-to-Book (P/B) ratios slightly above historical averages, they reflect a fair premium for high-quality earnings and robust capital buffers. In a 2026 environment defined by global volatility, a 5% to 6% dividend yield backed by a 13% Return on Equity (ROE) remains a highly attractive entry point for investors seeking stable real returns rather than speculative growth.
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