Singapore, Feb 8, 2026, 14:50 SGT — The market has closed.
- OCBC slipped 1.0% on Friday, following a flat finish the previous day.
- The bank revealed it tapped its treasury shares again, this time to cover staff schemes.
- Attention shifts to the Feb 25 full-year numbers, with investors scanning for early moves from the new CEO.
Shares of Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (SGX:O39) finished Friday at S$21.23, slipping 22 Singapore cents, or 1.03%. The session saw the stock move within a S$21.15 to S$21.35 range, and volume landed at roughly 6.2 million shares. 1
Investors now have their focus set on one thing as the new week approaches: OCBC’s full-year 2025 results, expected on Feb. 25. That’s coming with Singapore’s banks trading close to their highs, and traders paying close attention for any sign of changes in dividends or capital strategies. 2
The numbers will give an initial read on just how much leeway the new CEO, Tan Teck Long, actually has. Tan stepped in on Jan. 1 and said the team was “galvanised to hit even higher notes,” Bloomberg reported via local outlets. 3
Asian shares retreated Friday, dragged down by losses in tech stocks. Investors were also digesting Moody’s downgrade of Indonesia’s sovereign outlook. Singapore’s benchmark slipped 0.8% by the close. 4
OCBC highlighted a minor corporate move after the bell. According to a Singapore Exchange filing from Feb. 6, the bank allocated 2,237 treasury shares—worth S$33,528.83—for its employee share schemes. Treasury shares refer to stock owned by the company itself.
Not an outlier, the move still kept investors watching share count mechanics—especially with capital management in focus. Now, with Tan just stepping in and the sector’s valuations off their lows, those details are tougher to ignore.
Other banks slipped as well. Shares in DBS Group finished at S$59.30, losing 0.6%, while United Overseas Bank wrapped up at S$38.50, down 0.39%, MarketWatch figures showed. 5
Looking out over the coming week, traders are set to watch for moves in bond yields and shifts in rate expectations—key levers for net interest margin, the difference between what banks pay on deposits versus what they earn on loans. Right behind that: credit costs and the first signals on loan demand.
But here’s the thing: when volatility spikes across regional markets or funding grows scarce, bank stocks can tumble sharply regardless of any headlines. In those moments, earnings reports shift—investors pay less attention to the “beat” and more to management’s forward-looking comments.
Singapore’s market is closed for the weekend, so attention shifts to Monday when OCBC trading picks up again. The next real mover: the bank’s full-year numbers are out Feb. 25, and that’s expected to shape what comes next—dividends are part of that conversation.