Singapore banking trends in 2025 are being reported as one unified story. They are not — and treating them that way leads to genuinely poor decisions about where to hold assets, which institutions to trust, and how to read the news coming out of the sector. Private banking leaders in Singapore are adapting to the evolving needs of affluent clients. They are focusing on personalized services and innovative investment strategies to differentiate themselves in a competitive market. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for both investors and financial advisors navigating the complexities of wealth management.
The incumbent banks — DBS, OCBC, and UOB — delivered a combined SGD $25 billion in net profit in 2024, hit all-time share price highs in December 2025, and are paying dividend yields between 5% and 6%. Their capital ratios all sit more than 5 percentage points above MAS minimums. These are not institutions under pressure. In the first nine months of 2025 alone, the three generated another S$17.6 billion in profit despite compressing margins. The Big Three are performing well, and the reasons they are performing well matter specifically to international account holders.
At the same time, Singapore’s five MAS-licensed digital banks are still burning cash, cutting staff, and watching the promotional savings rates that drove their early growth compress as global interest rates fall. GXS Bank cut 82 jobs in July 2025 — roughly 10% of its workforce — and is now redirecting its growth strategy toward Malaysia. The two markets are not in the same conversation, and conflating them produces a blurred picture that helps no one.

Singapore Banking in 2025 Is Moving on Two Separate Tracks
Most Singapore banking trend coverage runs the incumbents and digital banks together under one framing: “Singapore banking is transforming.” That is technically accurate. But the transformation is happening in opposite directions for different institutions — and the direction matters enormously depending on what kind of client you are and what you need from a Singapore banking relationship.
The incumbent track is a story about optimizing an already dominant position. Fee income from wealth management grew fast enough in 2024 to more than offset compressing net interest margins. The AI deployments running at scale inside DBS — covered in our Singapore AI banking analysis — are generating real operational returns. Capital buffers are the strongest they have been in years. These banks are not disrupting themselves. They are extracting more value from infrastructure they have spent decades building, and doing it at a record pace.
The digital bank track is a different story entirely. Trust Bank, GXS Bank, and MariBank serve retail consumers. ANEXT Bank and Green Link Digital Bank focus on SMEs and business clients. All five launched in 2022 into a high-interest-rate environment that made promotional savings rates a viable customer acquisition tool. That environment has shifted. The rate tailwind is gone, the path to profitability has narrowed, and each of the five is now executing a very different survival strategy.
Quick note on what this separation means practically. If you are considering Singapore banking as a non-resident — for wealth management, asset protection, or business infrastructure — the track you choose determines almost everything about your experience. The distinction matters more than most overview articles acknowledge.
DBS · OCBC · UOB
Trust · GXS · MariBank · ANEXT · Green Link
The Incumbent Banks — Record Profits and a Shifting Revenue Mix
The big number from 2024 — SGD $25 billion in combined net profit for the Big Three — is worth pausing on. Not because it is surprising in isolation, but because of what is underneath it. Net interest margins narrowed as global rates peaked and started easing. That compression was the story most financial journalists led with. The more important story is what compensated for it.
Fee income. Specifically, wealth management fee income. DBS reported fee income growth of 23% in 2024. OCBC’s wealth management division posted healthy double-digit growth. UOB expanded its fee income base through its regional ASEAN network. All three banks are executing the same strategic pivot: reducing dependence on spread income — which fluctuates with rate cycles — and building fee-based revenue streams that are less sensitive to what central banks do. That pivot is well underway, and it is changing the character of these institutions in ways that matter to international private clients.
Here is the implication most analyses skip. When wealth management becomes the growth engine — rather than a secondary service — it gets more resources, more product development, more relationship manager headcount, and more senior attention. The international private client segment, which is wealth management’s core constituency, benefits from that investment directly. The banks are improving at exactly the service that matters most to you at the same time as the press is concerned about a different metric (NIM) that matters less to you.
December 2025 produced one more notable development for DBS specifically. MAS appointed DBS as Singapore’s second RMB clearing bank, joining ICBC’s Singapore branch — which had held that position since 2013. For clients with China-linked business flows, RMB settlement through a major Singapore-domiciled institution changes the transaction cost and counterparty risk calculation. It is not a headline that generated much coverage, but it is an institutional positioning move with durable consequences for clients on the China corridor.
Sources: Bank investor disclosures, 2024 full-year results. Combined net profit: approximately SGD $25 billion.
The Digital Banks — Three Years In, an Honest Assessment
Most coverage of Singapore’s digital banks still reads like it was written in 2022, before the rate environment changed. So let me be direct about where things actually stand.
The launch pitch was: higher savings rates, better mobile experience, underserved niches. In 2022 and 2023, when global rates were elevated, that pitch worked. Trust Bank grew to over 800,000 customers by 2024, with its deposit base tripling from S$1.2 billion to over S$3 billion. GXS Bank offered savings rates as high as 2.38% per annum — genuinely competitive against the incumbents at the time. MariBank introduced Mari Invest Income, expanding beyond pure savings into investment-adjacent products.
Then interest rates started falling. GXS’s primary savings account rate dropped from 2.38% to 1.08% over the course of 2025 — a compression of more than half. The customer acquisition engine that ran on rate competition stalled. By July 2025, GXS cut 82 jobs, roughly 10% of its total workforce, and began a visible strategic pivot toward Malaysia. The reasoning is straightforward: 33 million people, lower banking penetration, a less saturated digital banking market. Singapore’s 6 million people are simply not enough headroom for three competing digital retail banks to each become profitable simultaneously.
The survival strategies have now diverged clearly, and it is worth naming them. Trust Bank is the closest to profitability — its CEO predicted break-even by end of 2025, and its backing from Standard Chartered Bank Singapore and FairPrice gives it infrastructure advantages the others do not have. Trust is the most likely to thrive in Singapore as a standalone business. MariBank is positioning itself as Sea Group’s regional banking arm across Southeast Asia; its Singapore operation is more of a platform than a destination, with break-even targeted for 2026-2027. GXS is the most exposed in Singapore but has a credible regional story if the Malaysia expansion scales as projected.
What does this mean for account holders? The savings rate story is largely over. If you opened a digital bank account in 2023 specifically for the rate advantage, you had a good run for about 18 months. That window has closed. The more durable use case for digital banks in Singapore is embedded finance for SMEs, niche lending for specific segments (gig workers, students), and business current accounts for smaller entities that the incumbents do not serve efficiently. For non-residents considering Singapore banking seriously, the digital banks are not the right track.
What MAS Is Building Behind the Announcement Headlines
The most consequential Singapore banking development of the past 12 months received far less coverage than it deserved. COSMIC — MAS’s centralized platform enabling Singapore’s six major commercial banks to share financial crime data — is operational and is changing how compliance works across the sector in a structural way.
The six participating banks are DBS, OCBC, UOB, Standard Chartered, Citibank, and HSBC. When these institutions share a common view of customers who display financial crime indicators, the compliance landscape shifts fundamentally. A client who raises flags at one bank does not start with a clean slate at another. The monitoring is more consistent, the enforcement outcomes are more predictable, and the information asymmetry that previously allowed some clients to arbitrage between institutions disappears. For legitimate international clients, this is a net positive — it reduces arbitrary variation in how applications are treated and how accounts are monitored. For gray-area applications, the bar is materially higher.
The regulatory fine data already reflects heightened enforcement. Fines for AML/KYC and transaction monitoring breaches rose 22% in 2024. That increase fell predominantly on traditional banks — not digital ones — which tells you that the scrutiny is not limited to newer institutions. Separately, industry data shows that roughly 90% of banks experience measurable financial losses from inefficient KYC processes, with poor data management linked to a 35% increase in client attrition. Those are operational problems, not purely compliance ones — but they show up as delays and friction in the onboarding process that international clients experience directly.
MAS also formalized a stablecoin framework in 2025. XSGD — a Singapore dollar-pegged stablecoin issued by StraitsX, backed 1:1 with reserves held at DBS and Standard Chartered — became a reference implementation of the framework. This matters for clients considering digital asset custody alongside traditional Singapore banking. The regulatory line between the two is becoming more defined, not less — which is appropriate and removes some of the ambiguity that made cross-asset banking in Singapore complicated for international clients in 2023 and 2024.
Sources: Bank investor disclosures; MAS enforcement data; industry compliance research (2024–2025).
What Singapore Banking Trends Mean for International Account Holders
The two-track structure of Singapore banking creates a practical decision framework for non-residents — one that is more useful than generic “Singapore is a great banking hub” coverage.

The incumbent track is right for non-residents seeking asset protection, wealth management, CRS-compliant cross-border banking, and long-term institutional stability. The fee income shift at DBS, OCBC, and UOB toward wealth management is a direct benefit for this client profile — more resources and more attention are flowing toward exactly the product set that international private clients need. The COSMIC compliance infrastructure means cleaner, more consistent onboarding for legitimate applicants, though it also means documentation quality matters more than it did before 2024. The full requirements for non-residents are covered in our guide to Singapore bank accounts for non-residents.
The digital bank track serves a narrower international use case. ANEXT Bank and Green Link Digital Bank — both focused on business clients — are worth considering for SMEs that need embedded finance tools or lean operational accounts alongside a Singapore-incorporated entity. For that specific use case, the lower account minimums and more flexible onboarding at the business-focused digital banks are relevant. You can compare options across both tracks in our full list of banks in Singapore.
One trend worth flagging directly: MAS’s monetary easing since April 2025 means that the fixed deposit rate advantage that attracted some international clients in 2023 and 2024 is compressing steadily. The “park money in Singapore for rates” strategy had a window — that window is narrowing. The more durable reasons to bank in Singapore are regulatory clarity, access to ASEAN wealth management infrastructure, and the stable jurisdiction benefit that holds through multiple rate cycles. Those hold now as much as they did two years ago, and they are reasons that do not expire when rates move.
How to Position Yourself as an International Client Right Now
Singapore’s banking landscape is less complicated than it looks from outside — once you separate the two tracks and know which one aligns with what you actually need. The access path for non-residents, however, remains specific and has gotten more documentation-intensive as the COSMIC compliance environment has matured.
For wealth management and private banking clients, the incumbent track is the right starting point. Source of wealth documentation, proof of funds, and residency documentation need to be prepared carefully and presented in a format that Singapore compliance teams expect. Working with an advisor who knows what each bank’s compliance function is looking for — and how to structure a non-resident application to clear the review process efficiently — reduces both timeline and rejection risk. For SME clients, the Singapore business banking guide for SMEs is a useful starting point for understanding which institutions serve smaller entities most effectively.
At Easy Global Banking, we facilitate Singapore bank account opening for international clients — individuals and businesses — across both tracks and across the full range of Singapore institutions. If you are ready to open a Singapore bank account, contact us to start with the right preparation in place and a clear picture of which institution fits your profile.




