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Singapore Banking Monthly - Phillip Securities 2020-10-12: Additional Relief Measures To Ease Moratorium Woes

Singapore Banks - Phillip Securities Research | SGinvestors.io DBS GROUP HOLDINGS LTD (SGX:D05) OVERSEA-CHINESE BANKING CORP (SGX:O39) UNITED OVERSEAS BANK LTD (SGX:U11)

Singapore Banking Monthly - Additional Relief Measures To Ease Moratorium Woes

  • Lowest quarterly interest rates since 2014 (3M-SIBOR: 0.43%; 3M-SOR: 0.19%) expected to weigh in on NIMs for the banks in 3Q20.
  • Loans growth fell for a third consecutive month (-1.03% y-o-y), as business loans contracted for the first time in four years (-0.04% y-o-y).
  • MAS announced partial extension of loan moratorium for individuals and SMEs in need, allowing banks to avoid potential cliff effect of loan quality deterioration upon expiry of loan moratorium.
  • Maintain the Singapore Banking Sector at NEUTRAL. Despite an expected recovery in non-interest income as the economy reopens, banks’ earnings are unlikely to reach pre-COVID-19 levels in the near term as banks continue to experience strong headwinds from low interest rates and heightened allowances.



3Q20 interest rates lowest since 2014

  • Average interest rates observed in 3Q20 was the lowest since 2014. With 3M-SIBOR and 3M-SOR at 44 bps and 94 bps lower than 1H20 average respectively, we expect banks to report NIM levels at similar or slightly lower than in 2Q20 as continued downward pressure on interest rates offsets benefits from repricing of deposit rates. See Fig in PDF report attached below.


Sluggish loans growth in August reflects poor economic outlook

  • Loans contracted 1.03% y-o-y in August, as outstanding loans shrank for the sixth consecutive month. The poor loans performance was attributed to business loans, which fell y-o-y (-0.04%) for the first time since November 2016 in August.
  • Consumer loans fell 2.61% y-o-y, but improved by 0.33% m-o-m, as all loans segment apart from housing loans (car loans, credit card loans, share financing and others) improve in August from a month ago. See Fig in PDF report attached below.


Additional moratorium support by MAS for individuals and SMEs reduces default risks for banks

  • On 5 October, MAS announced that it will be providing additional support for individuals and SMEs needing assistance in loan repayments, including extension in application to various moratorium relief schemes, as well as new measures to reduce cashflow challenges faced by as a result of the economic fallout from COVID-19.
  • Instead of a blanket deferment in loan repayment during the current loan moratorium period, the additional measures aim to allow individuals and SMEs to resume repayments at a lower quantum before easing back into repayments at levels before the moratorium period. This will partially ease cashflow challenges faced by borrowers while allowing the banks and other FIs to resume loan collections that can prevent cliff effect from a sudden deterioration in loan quality resulting from borrowers who are unable to resume full payments at the onset of the loan moratorium expiry.
  • Borrowers will also be allowed a longer window to apply for loan moratorium as long as they are not more than 90 days past due when applying for the relief measures.
  • As of 2Q20, the three banks have an aggregate of close to S$100bn of loans under moratorium. The higher portion of loans under moratorium for OCBC and UOB is due to higher exposure in Malaysia, whereby loan moratoriums are automatically granted for loans in Malaysian. We expect loans under moratorium to taper in 4Q20 as Malaysia has exited loan moratorium period in September.
  • The additional support measures by MAS will allow the banks to reduce default risks from non-payments as banks will be able to begin to loan payments in FY21, albeit at a slower rate.


Securities turnover shows sustained growth while derivatives volume remain volatile

  • Preliminary SDAV data indicates a y-o-y increase of 16% from S$940mn a year ago to S$1,088mn in August. Derivatives volumes also seemed to have picked up in September compared to a year ago. Volumes for the top five equity index futures which makes up more than 95% of monthly equity index futures contract turnover grew by an average of 9% y-o-y in September.
  • The newly launched FTSE Taiwan index continues to perform well in September, recording more than 300,000 increase in contracts from August to offset the fall in turnover for its MSCI counterpart (-200,000 contracts m-o-m).
  • Alongside contribution from Scientific Beta and BidFX acquisitions, we expect SGX (SGX:S68) to report 10% increase in earnings y-o-y for 1Q21.
  • See SGX Share Price; SGX Target Price.

Investment Action


Maintain the Singapore Banking Sector at NEUTRAL.


Re-rating Catalyst

  • A potential re-rating catalyst will be a better-than-expected credit profile of borrowers post-moratorium in Singapore, which can spell an earlier end to the heightened credit costs which the banks have guided for to the end of FY21.





Tay Wee Kuang Phillip Securities Research | https://www.stocksbnb.com/ 2020-10-12
SGX Stock Analyst Report NOT RATED DOWNGRADE ACCUMULATE 21.000 SAME 21.000
ACCUMULATE MAINTAIN ACCUMULATE 8.920 SAME 8.920
ACCUMULATE MAINTAIN ACCUMULATE 20.400 SAME 20.400



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