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DBS Says Likely Revenue Hit From Virus ‘Moving Target’

DBS Expects Further Revenue Hit as Virus Causes Loans to Sour

(Bloomberg) -- DBS Group Holdings Ltd. signaled that its estimate for a 2% revenue hit from the coronavirus may be revised if the pandemic is unexpectedly prolonged.

“This is a moving target,” the bank’s head of institutional banking Tan Su Shan said when asked about the projection in a Bloomberg Television interview in Singapore on Thursday. “We are living day by day, week by week right now.”

DBS Says Likely Revenue Hit From Virus ‘Moving Target’

Southeast Asia’s biggest lender made the forecast last month, based on an assumption that the outbreak would subside around the middle of the year. Since then it has spread around the globe, killing more than 4,600 people, roiling financial markets and prompting the World Health Organization to declare a pandemic. Asian stocks fell again Thursday after President Donald Trump said he will restrict travel from Europe to the U.S. for the next 30 days.

Singapore-based DBS is monitoring its loan portfolios very closely while continuing to conduct stress tests, said Tan, who oversees corporate clients. “The key here is to stay with the clients, watch everyone’s positions and make sure everyone is OK.”

Having gone through the initial wave of virus-inflicted fear earlier this year, Singapore and other parts of Asia are now seeing signs of stability as governments boost their economies via stimulus packages, Tan said. But the road to recovery would need business confidence and consumer demand returning, she added.

“Given the demand situation, I see NPLs going back up,” Tan said, expecting more bad loans from small and medium-sized companies and sectors including tourism, apparel, hospitality and those linked to consumer demand. Still, now is the time to extend credit to help small firms, she added.

DBS’s 2019 allowances for credit and other losses fell 1% while its non-performing loan ratio stood unchanged at 1.5%.

Shares of DBS fell 3.9% in Singapore on Thursday, in line with the benchmark Straits Times Index. The stock slid 22% this year.

Tan has marked her first anniversary in her current role, which she assumed in February 2019. Before that, she led DBS’s consumer banking and wealth management group from 2013.

To contact the reporters on this story: Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in Singapore at cchanjaroen@bloomberg.net;Haslinda Amin in Singapore at hamin1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, Russell Ward, David Scanlan

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.