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DBS Q4 Profit Falls 10% as Tax Costs and Rate Headwinds Mount

DBS Group, Southeast Asia’s largest lender, reported a 10% decline in fourth-quarter net profit on Monday, missing analyst estimates as higher tax expenses and cooling interest rates weighed on its bottom line. The Singaporean bank posted a net profit of S$2.36 billion (US$1.86 billion) for the final three months of 2025, marking a sharp contrast to the non-recurring gains that bolstered its performance a year earlier.

DBS Q4 Profit Falls 10% as Tax Costs and Rate Headwinds Mount

The bank’s total income for the quarter slipped 3.2% to S$5.33 billion. The core commercial book saw net interest income—the spread between loan earnings and deposit costs—drop 6.2% to S$3.59 billion. While fee and commission income grew by 13.5% to reach S$1.1 billion, it was insufficient to offset the combined impact of rising taxes and the absence of prior one-off gains. For the full year, DBS recorded a 3.2% dip in net profit to S$11.03 billion, trailing the S$11.275 billion consensus forecast.

Dividends and Market Resilience

Despite the profit contraction, DBS proposed a total quarterly payout of S$0.81 per share, consisting of a S$0.66 ordinary dividend and a S$0.15 capital return. Chief Executive Tan Su Shan emphasized that the bank’s robust balance sheet provides a "solid foundation" against ongoing geopolitical tensions and interest rate volatility. DBS is the first of Singapore’s "Big Three" lenders to report, with competitors United Overseas Bank and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. scheduled to release results later this month.

The lender’s shares have surged roughly 60% since April, fueled by a broader rally in Singaporean heavyweight banks following the announcement of U.S. trade tariffs. Analysts at Maybank Securities attribute this resilience to a "certainty premium," suggesting investors are flocking to Singapore as a haven from global policy instability. Additionally, government initiatives to revitalize the local equity market have provided a liquidity boost, even as the bank navigates a more challenging macroeconomic environment.

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