The Manila Times

SINGAPORE’S UOB MAINTAINS 2024 GUIDANCE

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SINGAPORE — Singapore’s United Overseas Bank (UOB) maintained earnings guidance for 2024 after posting on Thursday a 1-percent year-on-year rise in second-quarter net profit that slightly missed expectatio­ns.

“Global growth continues to be weighed down by geopolitic­al tensions and higher interest rates. However, we expect Asean to stay relatively resilient,” said

UOB Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Wee Ee Cheong in a statement.

UOB maintained its 2024 projection­s of low single-digit loan growth, double-digit fee growth and positive growth in total income, according to Wee’s presentati­on slides accompanyi­ng the earnings results.

The bank, which is Southeast

Asia’s third-largest by assets, also maintained expectatio­ns of core cost-to-income ratio at 41 percent to 42 percent and credit costs at lower end of 25 to 30 basis points, the slides showed.

UOB said its April-June net profit rose to SG$1.43 billion ($1.07 billion) from SG$1.42 billion a year earlier on the back of higher net fee income, a rebound in loan-related fees and wealth management fees, and double-digit growth in credit card fees.

This was however lower than the mean estimate of SG$1.44 billion from four analysts polled by LSEG.

Net interest margin, a key gauge of profitabil­ity, declined to 2.04 percent in the first half of this year from 2.13 percent in the same period a year earlier.

UOB’s results kick-start the current earnings season for Singaporea­n banks, which have benefited from strong inflows of wealth into Asia due to its political stability, low taxes and policies favorable toward family offices and trusts.

Larger peers DBS and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. are due to announce their quarterly results on August 7 and Friday, respective­ly.

UOB’s second-quarter result showed a 40-percent year-onyear jump in wealth management income and 10-percent year-on-year increase in total assets under management to SG$182 billion, the company’s presentati­on slides showed.

The bank announced an interim dividend of 88 Singapore cents per ordinary share.

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