Financial Results
Pre-Tax H1 2025 Profit Dips At DBS; Wealth Fees Rise

Among the details of its results, the Singapore-headquartered group said it wealth management fees helped drive income growth.
Yesterday, DBS
Group announced a pre-tax profit of S$6.274 billion ($4.94
billion) for the second half of last year, slipping 2 per cent on
a year earlier; for all of 2025, profit rose 1 per cent to S$13.1
billion.
The Singapore-listed banking group said commercial book net fee
income rose 18 per cent in the second half of 2025, year-on-year,
to $2.46 billion. The increase was “broad-based and led by wealth
management fees,” which rose 28 per cent to a record $1.44
billion from growth in investment products and bancassurance. For
all of 2025, wealth fees and commission income rose 29 per cent
to S$2.814 billion.
Pre-tax income in the commercial banking/wealth management arm
was £2.145 billion in the second half of 2025, up from S$2.091
billion a year earlier.
Loan-related, investment banking and transaction service fees
were also higher, DBS said.
In her outlook for results in 2026, CEO Tan Su Shan (pictured
below) said total income is expected to come in at around the
2025 levels; group net interest income will be “slightly below”
2025 levels. DBS commercial book noninterest income growth
will be high single digits, and mid-teens percentage growth
is expected in wealth management.
Tan Su Shan
On a reported basis, the bank said it had a Common Equity Tier-1 ratio of 17.0 per cent.
Shares have risen more than 28.2 per cent in the 12 months to 9 February; yesterday, they closed up 3.17 per cent from the start of January this year.