Singapore, Feb 9, 2026, 14:47 (SGT) — Regular session
- DBS shares slipped, with the bank posting a quarterly profit below forecasts and seeing its margins squeezed.
- Rates shifted into headwind territory, keeping dividend payouts and capital return plans in focus.
- Investors have an eye on peer earnings due later this month, along with DBS’s dividend schedule set for April.
DBS Group Holdings shares slipped 1.1% to S$58.63 by midday Monday, after an earlier drop of up to 1.9%. OCBC traded 0.7% higher, with UOB adding 0.8%. 1
DBS has a way of shaping expectations for Singapore’s bank earnings, so investors are watching closely. The key question: how quickly will lower rates show up in profits? Net interest margin is crucial here — that’s the difference between what the bank pulls in from loans and other assets and what it shells out on deposits and funding.
Dividend hopes are tangled up with the margin argument. Payouts help banks prop up their stock, sure, but if earnings start to lose steam, there’s a limit to how much those dividends can really do.
Early Monday, DBS released its full-year results and announced its dividend in an exchange filing. 2
Fourth-quarter net profit at the bank came in at S$2.26 billion, down 10%. Group net interest margin narrowed to 1.93%, from 2.15% a year ago. Return on equity also slipped, falling to 13.5% from 15.8%.
Net interest margin moves fast when benchmark rates drop, yet funding costs can prove stubborn if banks battle over deposits. That’s the tricky blend investors are watching as they look ahead to the rest of 2026.
DBS is sticking to its forecast for a slight dip in net profit this year compared to 2025, even after the latest quarter missed the LSEG mean estimate of around S$2.55 billion. The bank announced a 66-cent final ordinary dividend and an additional 15-cent capital return dividend for the quarter, with plans to keep paying out capital return dividends through financial years 2026 and 2027 unless something unexpected happens. According to CGS International’s Tay Wee Kuang and Lim Siew Khee, softer markets trading income was “the key driver” behind the miss. CEO Tan Su Shan didn’t mince words in a note to clients, urging them to “buckle up” as she expects a turbulent year ahead. UOB and OCBC have their reports lined up for Feb. 24 and Feb. 25, respectively. 3
The risk scenario is still lurking. Should rate cuts arrive more quickly than banks anticipate, margins would likely come under more pressure—while fresh trouble tied to property exposures could drive up credit costs and throw a wrench in capital return strategies.
Investors are eyeing the dividend schedule, with DBS listing April 8 as the ex-dividend date and payment coming up on April 17, per details on its investor relations site. 4