Singapore may allow virtual banks after Hong Kong move, DBS says

DBS CEO Piyush Gupta speaks during a Reuters Newsmaker event in Singapore March 2, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su
DBS CEO Piyush Gupta in Singapore in 2017. (REUTERS/Edgar Su)

By Chanyaporn Chanjaroen and Juliette Saly

Singapore could follow Hong Kong in handing out virtual banking licenses, according to the head of the largest local lender, in a move that would create another source of competition for the city state’s established banks.

“I see no reason why it would not,” DBS Group Holdings Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Piyush Gupta said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, when asked whether the Singapore authorities might issue similar licenses to Hong Kong. But he downplayed the likely impact on Singapore’s existing banks, which are already competing with international giants like Citigroup Inc. as well as financial technology startups.

Provided incumbent lenders have been upgrading their digital capabilities, any virtual banking newcomers shouldn’t be considered a threat, Gupta said. “To my mind, that’s just basically giving a few more banking licenses,” he added.

Among the firms to receive virtual licenses in Hong Kong, three have partnered with financial institutions such as Standard Chartered Plc, BOC Hong Kong Holdings Ltd. and ZhongAn Online P&C Insurance Co. Fintech firm WeLab Holdings Ltd. has also received a Hong Kong banking license. The new entrants are targeting a market dominated by HSBC Holdings Plc, which has a leading share of the local market for retail and corporate lending, mortgages and credit cards.

Virtual banks typically have lower operational costs than traditional lenders that rely on brick-and-mortar branch networks. Last month, Gupta told DBS’s annual shareholder meeting that a new digital bank could generate $100 of income from a cost base a little above $30. In contrast, DBS’s cost-to-income ratio stood at 44 percent last year.

Level Playing Field

In the interview, Gupta said he’d only see a problem in Singapore if virtual banks are allowed to operate on more lenient terms than the incumbents, for example in terms of the capital they are required to hold. “The real challenge is if the regulators create an unlevel playing field, and let the new bank licensees come in and do banking on different terms,” he said. But he said most regulators “don’t seem to be inclined” to do that.

Singapore’s banking landscape is dominated by the three local lenders -- DBS, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. and United Overseas Bank Ltd. -- though foreign firms such as HSBC and Citigroup also have branch networks.

Virtual licenses are “a broader banking policy that has to be studied carefully," Singapore’s Education Minister Ong Ye Kung, who sits on the MAS board, said in a parliamentary speech in January. “The real question is whether there are benefits for Singapore to increase the number of banks in Singapore by admitting primarily digital start-up banks,” Ong added.

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