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OCBC reports record net profit of S$3.59b in H1; H1 dividend at 40 cents

The dividend is 43% or 12 cents higher than in H1 2022.

OCBC’s reached a new net profit record for the first half of 2023, carried by its record income.

The bank’s net profit rose 38% year-on-year to S$3.59b during the first six months of the year. This was driven by net interest income growing by 48% to S$4.73b, attributable to a 6% increase in average assets and a 65-basis point expansion in its net interest margin (NIM) to 2.28%, the bank’s latest financial report showed.

An interim dividend of 40 cents has been announced, 43% or 12 cents higher than in H1 2022. This represents a payout ratio of 50% of the group’s H1 2023 net profit, OCBC said. The Scrip Dividend Scheme will not be applicable to the interim dividend.

“We have delivered a robust set of results for the first half of 2023. The Group achieved record net profit, which crossed the S$3b mark for the first time on the back of strong contributions from the group’s banking, wealth management and insurance franchise,” CEO Helen Wong said.

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Higher trading, investment and insurance income drove OCBC’s non-interest income to rise 3% to S$2.08b in H1, from S$2.02b in the previous year. 

However, net fee income fell by 12% to S$883m, bogged down by softer wealth management-related fees due to a purported decline in customer activities amidst a “risk-off investment environment,” OCBC said. Higher loan-related and investment banking fees slightly offset the lower wealth fees.

Net trading income came at S$513m, whilst net gains from sale of investment securities is S$38m against a net loss of S$78m in H1 2022.

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Profit from insurance rose 10% to S$500m, thanks to improved investment performance. Net weighted new sales and new business embedded value (NBEV) for Great Eastern Holdings were S$726m and S$351m respectively, whilst the NBEV margin improved to 48.4% due to a favourable product mix.

For the second quarter, OCBC’s net profit was S$1.71b, 34% higher than in Q2 2022.

Strong income growth drove the rise during the quarter. Net interest income rose 40% to S$2.39b, underpinned by asset growth and a 55-basis point increase in NIM to 2.26%.

Non-interest income grew 11% to S$1.07b, mainly from net gains from the sale of investment securities and higher profit from insurance, partly offset by lower fee and trading income, OCBC said.

Operating expenses of S$1.33b were 2% above Q2 2022, led by an increase in staff costs. Cost-to-income ratio (CIR) was lower at 38.5%.

Total allowances were higher at S$252m, compared to S$72m in Q2 2022, driven by an increase in allowances for non-impaired assets.

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