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OCBC’s net profit plummets by 15% to $885m in 2Q

On back of lower insurance income.

The banking giant suffered blows dealt by a decline in investment income as well as unrealised mark-to-market losses in its insurance portfolio as it saw its bottomline crash by 15%.

According to a press release by OCBC, the results weren’t at par with last year’s strong quarter, which included a substantial gain from the sale of an equity investment under insurance subsidiary Great Eastern Holdings.

The release added that earnings from Great Eastern fell 66% to S$78 million from S$230 million a year ago, partly due to the absence of a S$105 million gain from the sale of an equity investment in 2Q15.

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“GEH recorded strong underlying insurance business growth during the quarter, but its quarterly earnings were affected by unfavourable financial market conditions which resulted in unrealised mark-to-market losses in its bond and equity investment portfolio,” the release said.

Excluding Great Eastern, banking operations fell by 1% year on year. Net interest income also declined by 2% to S$1.26 billion from S$1.28 billion a year ago, as a drop in interest earning assets offset improvements in net interest margin.

“Customer loan balances of S$205 billion contracted 2% from a year ago from lower trade loans and reduced offshore borrowings of Chinese entities as a result of more favourable onshore borrowing rates. These offset increases in consumer loans and loans to the building and construction sector. Net interest margin for the quarter rose 1 basis point to 1.68% from a year ago from improved customer loan yields,” OCBC said.

Non-interest income for the bank was also 16% lower at $788m, while fee and commission income fell 5% to S$417 million, largely from lower brokerage and investment banking income.

“Net trading income, primarily treasury-related income from customer flows, rose to S$123 million from S$70 million in 2Q15,” the report said.



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