-- UOB reports 2Q net profit of S$713 million, up from S$636 million a year earlier

-- UOB CEO flags interest in ING's Asian asset management business

-- UOB Chairman Wee Cho Yaw to step down next year

(Recasts and adds details throughout)

By Sam Holmes

SINGAPORE--Singapore's United Overseas Bank Ltd. (U11.SG) Tuesday reported a 12.1% rise in second-quarter net profit, beating analyst estimates, on the back of higher loan volumes and fee income, and flagged its interest in Dutch bank ING Groep NV's (ING) asset management business as it seeks to expand its regional footprint.

The bank also announced the resignation of its 83-year-old chairman Wee Cho Yaw, effective at next year's annual general meeting in April. Hsieh Fu Hua, formerly a president with the city-state's state investment firm Temasek Holdings and chief executive with the Singapore Exchange Ltd. (S68.SG), was named as Mr. Wee's replacement as non-executive chairman.

Net profit for the three months ended June 30 was 713 million Singapore dollars (US$574 million), up from S$636 million a year earlier, Singapore's third-largest bank by assets said in a statement. The result was higher than the average estimate of S$614 million from five analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires.

"The good thing is we are growing strongly in fees, which helped offset margin pressure," UOB Chief Executive Wee Ee Cheong said.

Net interest income rose 7.4% to S$981 million from S$913 million, while non-interest income rose 20% to S$629 million from S$524 million.

Singapore's banks, like their Hong Kong counterparts, have faced persistent headwinds from contracting net interest margins over the past three years but have managed to bolster earnings by supporting loans volumes, more recently through stronger U.S. dollar-denominated trade finance growth.

In spite of some signs of stabilization late last year and earlier this year, spreads fell again in the second quarter owing to the accentuated low world-wide interest-rate environment. UOB's net interest margin fell six basis points to 1.92% from the first quarter. Local peers DBS Group Holdings Ltd. (D05.SG) and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. Ltd. (O39.SG) also both reported deterioration in their second quarter net interest margins last week but managed to offset these pressures with stronger loans growth.

Mr. Wee, who is the son of the outgoing chairman, said the group is looking to take advantage of expansion opportunities in the region as they arise and the bank is interested in the regional asset management business of ING.

The Dutch financial-services company is taking bids for its Asian asset management arm in the region as part of its wider plan to restructure following its bailout by the Dutch state during the 2008 global financial crisis.

"ING, yes, we are interested in, with a lot depending on the price," Mr. Wee said.

"For the wealth management piece, we are also actively looking at it, but in the meantime we are growing organically."

Mr. Wee added his father's resignation is part of the board's broader succession plan. The elder Mr. Wee was appointed chairman and CEO of the bank in 1974. His son assumed the CEO position in 2007.

UOB said the elder Mr. Wee would be given the honorary title of Chairman Emeritus and would be a director with the bank.

Write to Sam Holmes at samuel.holmes@dowjones.com

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