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DBS tops US$100 bil market value in Singapore Exchange first

Chanyaporn Chanjaroen and Gabrielle Ng / Bloomberg
Chanyaporn Chanjaroen and Gabrielle Ng / Bloomberg • 3 min read
DBS tops US$100 bil market value in Singapore Exchange first
Southeast Asia’s top lender gained as much as 0.8% in Singapore trading on Monday to hit $45.50. The firm is trading at a market capitalisation of $129 billion, extending its gains this year to 4.3%. Photo: Bloomberg
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DBS Group Holdings Ltd. became the first listed company in Singapore to top $100 billion in market value, helped by a softer US currency that amplified gains on the local stock market.

Southeast Asia’s top lender gained as much as 0.9% in Singapore trading on Monday, and is trading at a market capitalisation of $129.2 billion (US$100.4 billion), extending its gains this year to more than 4%.

The advance in DBS’s share price in US-dollar terms was driven by the weaker greenback. So far this year, the Singapore dollar has appreciated about 6% against the US dollar. In local currency terms, DBS has eased slightly from its record closing high of $46.67 on Feb 26.

At the current market value, DBS ranks about 22nd among global banks, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s ahead of Tokyo-based Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc, but half that of HSBC Holdings Plc. Some of Asia’s biggest banks like Commonwealth Bank of Australia and India’s HDFC Bank Ltd have bigger market capitalisations.

The milestone comes after the city-state’s lenders pledged in recent months to hand over billions of dollars in surplus capital to investors, encouraged by record-high earnings last year. DBS in particular, has benefited from increases in lending and wealth fees. Other than DBS, Singapore-based Sea Ltd that is listed in New York reached this valuation before.

See also: Great Eastern given till Sept 30 to complete proposed transactions

Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Tan Su Shan took charge of DBS in March from Piyush Gupta after his 15-year leadership. Tan said at her first earnings call last month that the bank seeks to benefit from supply-chain changes undertaken by its clients and increased demand for hedging foreign exchange exposure amid US President Donald Trump’s tariff moves.

“A lot of DBS’s out-performance has been due to the larger growth of its wealth management, which is really starting to challenge top players in Asia,” said Michael Makdad, a senior analyst at Morningstar Inc, adding he sees the business continuing to grow. “Despite Trump’s tariffs, the environment remains relatively benign for Singapore banks which are increasing share dividends and buybacks more than we would’ve expected a year ago.”

DBS is the third-largest wealth manager in Asia, excluding mainland China, according to data compiled by industry publication Asian Private Banker. Net new money for its business catering to the rich came in at $21 billion last year, demonstrating the strong inflows that have exceeded $20 billion for the past three years through 2024.

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