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DBS aims to double Australian lending book in 5 years

DBS aims to double Australian lending book in 5 years

Business Times5 hours ago

[SYDNEY] DBS Group aims to double its Australian lending book in the next five years, its CEO Tan Su Shan said, as the Singapore-headquartered bank seeks to take advantage of trade links between Australia and South-east Asia.
The bank said on Wednesday (Jun 18) it had signed a pact with trade agency Austrade which will help it facilitate and finance more trade and investment between Australian and South-east Asian businesses, especially from Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam.
Tan said that DBS's Australian lending book was currently worth about A$11 billion (S$9.2 billion) which, she said, could double to A$20 billion in the next five years.
'Australian companies have been more domestic-centric. We are trying to change that narrative,' Tan said at a press conference on Tuesday.
Referring to its Australian client AirTrunk, a data centre operator that was bought by a Blackstone-led consortium for A$24 billion last year, Tan said the company was one of the first few to invest in data centres outside of Australia.
'We'd love to rinse and repeat that with the other big Australian companies,' she said.
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DBS posted in May better-than-expected quarterly results, boosted by wealth management fees that jumped 35 per cent on-year to a record quarterly high of S$724 million, which the bank attributed to strong market sentiment.
Assets under management at the bank, South-east Asia's biggest, climbed 13 per cent to a record high of S$432 billion in the first quarter.
Tan said while the US dollar and US Treasury's safe-haven status was not yet being threatened, some of the bank's clients had started to diversify away from US dollar-linked investments, which has benefited Japan, among others.
'You've seen also a lot more interest in the euro and the yen. The yen has strengthened as well. So we see people now looking at where do I invest in yen?,' she said. REUTERS

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[SINGAPORE] As global interest in nuclear energy surges, investors can gain exposure to the sector by betting on physical uranium or miners, utilities companies and reactor manufacturers, said DBS in a report. The bank, in the latest edition of its Chief Investment Officer Vantage Point report on Monday (Jun 16), said: '(We) believe that nuclear energy is at the cusp of a new renaissance.' Nuclear power is gaining traction as countries face an urgent need to decarbonise, diversify energy sources amid geopolitical conflict and meet growing electricity demand with the rise of artificial intelligence (AI). The emergence of a new class of nuclear reactors, known as small modular reactors (SMRs), is another factor. These reactors can be developed in places unsuitable for traditional nuclear plants, and at lower startup costs. '(By) engineering and economic merit alone, nuclear power should certainly command much greater attention in the narratives of energy transition today,' said DBS in the report. Where to invest The most straightforward play for investors would be in physical uranium, as the growing demand for nuclear energy 'unambiguously implies a growing need' for the radioactive metal. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 12.30 pm ESG Insights An exclusive weekly report on the latest environmental, social and governance issues. Sign Up Sign Up DBS noted that uranium prices have rallied over 160 per cent since the end of 2019, outperforming oil, natural gas and gold. But despite strong demand and a supply crunch, spot uranium prices remain far from their 2007 peak. Investors can get exposure to the metal, which trades over the counter, through futures, exchange-traded funds or listed companies that hold physical uranium. Another investment opportunity lies in uranium miners, which 'would clearly be beneficiaries under a nuclear energy revolution', said DBS. It noted that key mining players have had strong returns between 2022 and 2024, with some outperforming the 53.2 per cent return of the S&P 500 Index during that period (see table). While players involved in exploration and development face larger execution risks, producers generally have more predictable cash flows based on underlying commodity prices, said DBS. Another means of exposure is through utility companies which have considerable nuclear power generation. Independent power producers such as Vistra, Constellation and NRG Energy turned in 'resilient performances' in 2024, said DBS. This comes as data centres and big tech companies seek opportunities to procure nuclear power from such producers, spurred by the robust outlook for AI. 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