KEY POINTS
  • DBS said on Thursday that its first-quarter net profit fell 29% year-over-year to 1.17 billion Singapore dollars ($829.2 million) in January-March this year.
  • The fall in earnings was a result of the Singaporean bank setting aside 1.09 billion Singapore dollars ($772.5 million) to cover potential losses from the coronavirus pandemic.
  • DBS said two-thirds of that money were for "general allowances to anticipate a deeper and more prolonged economic impact from the pandemic," while the remaining was mainly "for new exposures recognised as non-performing during the quarter."
  • Piyush Gupta, chief executive of DBS, warned that margins could "drop off quite sharply" in the second quarter.

In this article

Southeast Asia's largest bank, DBS, on Thursday said it set aside 1.09 billion Singapore dollars ($772.5 million) to cover potential losses from the coronavirus pandemic — which resulted in a 29% year-over-year fall in net profit in the first quarter. 

The Singaporean bank's net profit fell to 1.17 billion Singapore dollars ($829.2 million) in January-March this year, down from 1.65 billion Singapore dollars ($1.17 billion) in the same period last year.

In this article