now loading...
Wealth Asia Connect Middle East Treasury & Capital Markets Europe ESG Forum TechTalk
Treasury & Capital Markets
Singapore SME adoption of Sora-based products grows
DBS issues more than US$339.4 million Sora-pegged SME loans
The Asset 10 May 2021

With Singapore ceasing the issuance of new loan products referencing the existing swap offer rate (SOR) at the end of April 2021, DBS reports strong traction among its small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) clients for loans that reference the Singapore overnight rate average (Sora).

The bank has issued more than S$450 million (US$339.4 million) in Sora-pegged loans as at end April 2021, just over six months after it launched the market’s first Sora-pegged business property loan. These now account for about a third of all new SME loans in Singapore issued by DBS.

This is yet another positive sign for Singapore’s transition towards Sora as its main interest rate benchmark. It’s important that SMEs are not left behind, says Joyce Tee, group head of SME Banking at DBS, as the financial industry progresses with the transition to a Sora-centred Singapore dollar interest rate market and the cessation of new SOR-linked loans from end-April 2021.

“SMEs form a significant cornerstone of Singapore’s economy and are critical to ensuring an orderly transition to the new interest rate benchmark,” Tee shares. “SMEs have responded positively to our outreach, with many making the decision to transit to Sora ahead of the industry’s schedule.”

With the impending discontinuation of interest rate benchmarks like the London interbank offered rate (Libor), the bank has been partnering its clients to achieve a smooth transition to alternative risk-free benchmark rates. In Singapore, all financial institutions will cease to offer new loan products referencing the existing SOR by the end of April 2021.

Additionally, the Singapore interbank offered rate (Sibor) will cease to be used in new loan products by the end of September 20212. 

Along the way, DBS priced Singapore’s first Sora-referenced floating rate note, closed the first Sora club loan coupled with a cross currency swap, and launched Singapore’s first business property mortgage loan referencing Sora.

Conversation
Wendy Yeo
Wendy Yeo
director, fund management
iFAST Financial
- JOINED THE EVENT -
In-person roundtable
Asia and the future of funds
View Highlights
Conversation
David Rees
David Rees
senior emerging markets economist
Schroders
- JOINED THE EVENT -
In-person roundtable
Securing the future
View Highlights