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Oil and gas impairments to hit S’pore banks’ Q3 earnings

SINGAPORE - The three largest local banks are poised to report higher impairment charges for loans to the struggling oil and gas industry as well as weaker interest margins when they post third-quarter earnings in the coming days.

SINGAPORE - The three largest local banks are poised to report higher impairment charges for loans to the struggling oil and gas industry as well as weaker interest margins when they post third-quarter earnings in the coming days.

DBS Group Holdings is expected to lead the increase in impairment charges of S$255 million for the period, a 43 per cent jump from a year earlier, according to Goldman Sachs Group. DBS, Singapore’s largest bank by assets, and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) will probably report a second consecutive quarterly profit decline, while United Overseas Bank (UOB) may post a sharp drop, analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg show.

Lenders are setting aside more money for loan losses tied to the oil and gas industry, which has been hurt by lower energy prices. Bank profits have also come under pressure from a weakening domestic economy and a slump in the Singapore interbank offered rate (Sibor) - one of the benchmarks for local interest rates - to a one-year low, which has curbed the amount lenders charge for loans.

“Dark clouds are still hanging over the oil and gas sector, which is going to add a negative feel to the banks,” said Mr Jeremy Teong, a banking analyst at Phillip Securities. “Net interest margin weakness will become pronounced given this year’s drop in Sibor.”

OCBC will report its September quarter results on Oct 27, followed a day later by UOB. DBS is due to publish its numbers on Oct 31. Net income at DBS and OCBC fell 2.6 per cent and 2.2 per cent, respectively, from a year earlier according to the average of six analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. UOB may report a 10 per cent drop, according to five estimates.

Goldman Sachs analyst Melissa Kuang estimates OCBC’s impairment charges increased 3.4 per cent, while UOB’s jumped almost 7 per cent, according to a report earlier this month. The emergence of more oil and gas-related non-performing loans will cause lenders’ bad-loan ratios to “rise modestly,” Fitch Ratings said in a separate note. Still, the banks are “securely positioned” to withstand further asset-quality deterioration because of “their disciplined underwriting standards and healthy provision buffers,” Fitch said.

More Singaporean companies tied to the oil and gas industry are facing difficulty repaying debt as demand for their services falls. Swissco Holdings, which supplies rigs and support vessels to oil and gas explorers, signalled last week that it may be in default after its failure to pay interest due earlier this month. Companies including KS Energy and AusGroup have sought more lenient repayment conditions from their debt holders.

Charges for oil and gas loans gone sour weighed on bank earnings in the second quarter: DBS’ profit dropped 6 per cent as provisions for troubled energy services firm Swiber Holdings overshadowed gains in interest and fee income, while OCBC, Singapore’s second-largest bank, reported a 15 per cent profit decline.

Meanwhile, borrowing costs have slumped this year as the local dollar strengthened, causing the three-month Sibor to fall by 0.6 percentage point in the July-September period. DBS’ net interest margin, a measure of profitability based on interest income, may drop to 1.75 per cent in the third quarter, from 1.78 per cent a year earlier, UBS analyst Aakash Rawat said in an Oct 13 report. OCBC’s margin probably shrank 2 basis points to 1.64 per cent while UOB’s may have fallen 13 points to 1.64 per cent, he estimates.

Singapore’s weaker economy is also weighing on credit growth, with total loans at banks operating in the city declining 1.6 per cent in August from a year ago, according to preliminary data from the Monetary Authority of Singapore. The contraction was mostly in sectors including financial institutions and manufacturing, while consumer loans continued to grow, the data show.

Gross domestic product fell an annualized 4.1 per cent in the third quarter from the previous three months, the Ministry of Trade and Industry said on Oct 14. Manufacturing contracted at an annualized rate of 17.4 per cent -- the worst quarter-on-quarter pullback since the third quarter of 2012. - BLOOMBERG

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