Jobs on TAL
All jobsOnsiteProduct ManagementpaymentsExperience not specified
OnsiteSVPpayments

SVP, Team Lead Cross-Border Transfers, Payments & Unsecured Lending, CBG SG

DBS BankSingaporePosted 19 May 2026

The SVP for Cross-Border Transfers at DBS Bank will lead the retail cross-border business to drive growth and profitability. The role involves strategic leadership, P&L management, product performance analysis, and team development. Candidates must possess deep industry knowledge of the transactional banking and cross-border payments landscape. The position requires a proven track record of managing product performance and leading high-performing teams.

Matched by TAL

50k new jobs listed every day. Install TAL to find more jobs like this.

Install TAL

Experience

Experience not specified

Function

Product Management

Work mode

Onsite, Singapore

Company

Tier 2

What you will work on

The SVP for Cross-Border Transfers at DBS Bank will lead the retail cross-border business to drive growth and profitability. The role involves strategic leadership, P&L management, product performance analysis, and team development. Candidates must possess deep industry knowledge of the transactional banking and cross-border payments landscape. The position requires a proven track record of managing product performance and leading high-performing teams.

TAL's take

Quality 75/1005/5 clarityTier 2 company

Senior executive role at a major regional bank with significant P&L ownership and strategic leadership requirements.

The JD is highly specific regarding strategic, product, and leadership accountabilities for a defined business unit.

Must haves

  • Experience in product management within the financial services industry
  • Focus on cross-border payments
  • Leadership experience managing and developing a team of product managers
  • Understanding of transactional banking landscape and cross-border payment products
  • Proven track record of managing product P&L

About the company

DBS is a major established bank, categorized as tier 2 due to being a traditional financial institution rather than a pure-play tech unicorn.

Posts mentioning DBS Bank

Parkinsons doesnt just breaks bodies- It breaks family

Yesterday was World Parkinsons Day. I want to share my mother’s journey-a story of pain, resilience & how Parkinson’s changed everything for our small family. We are a family of three-my father, mother, and me. We struggled financially throughout my childhood. But my parents never gave up. They made sure I got a good education, no matter the cost. When I finally got a job, I thought our hardships were over. I could finally support them, build my career, and let them rest after years of sacrifice. But that peace didn’t last long. Parkinson’s entered our lives. My mom is just 48. Diagnosed 36 months ago. No tremors-chronic pain, severe stiffness, her fingers curling backward, and involuntary movements from the medication. It’s not the Parkinson’s people typically imagine. She’s a pure vegetarian, never smoked or drank—just lived a simple, quiet life. Now she’s in constant discomfort, with good days becoming rare. And watching that is unbearable. I work in a big company and had all my hopes on corporate insurance. But then came the shock, Parkinson's treatment for employee parents isn't covered. That one clause shattered me. Parkinson's mostly affects the elderly. If parents aren't covered, what's even the point of including the disease in the policy? It's disheartening to know the system fails where it's needed most. Doctors suggested Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) as the best shot for improvement. But the cost runs into lakhs - completely unaffordable for a middle-class family like ours. Even my PF withdrawal won't cover 5% of it. I'm doing everything I can-but the emotional and financial toll is huge. It's affecting my career, my mental health, and my ability to focus. I carry the weight of feeling helpless every single day. Parkinson's isn't just a neurological disorder. It's pain. It's watching your mother suffer while being unable to help. It's fighting a system that turns away when you need it the most. We're not asking for sympathy. We're asking for awareness, for policy change, and for dignity-for patients and caregivers.

Healthcare114

What is a good native framework for a react dev to learn in terms of jobs

I have 7 years of experience and most of it is in react I have food experience in node and a few dbs I wanted to pick something native language as I am seeing web being replaced by native in my own company My options were native android (kotlin) Flutter React native Ii know react native will be easier since I have react web experience but I want to know which of these will give me the best chance of getting a job

Software Engineers82

Parkinsons doesnt just breaks bodies- It breaks family

Yesterday was World Parkinsons Day. I want to share my mother’s journey-a story of pain, resilience & how Parkinson’s changed everything for our small family. We are a family of three-my father, mother, and me. We struggled financially throughout my childhood. But my parents never gave up. They made sure I got a good education, no matter the cost. When I finally got a job, I thought our hardships were over. I could finally support them, build my career, and let them rest after years of sacrifice. But that peace didn’t last long. Parkinson’s entered our lives. My mom is just 48. Diagnosed 36 months ago. No tremors but chronic pain, severe stiffness, her fingers curling backward, and involuntary movements from the medication. It’s not the Parkinson’s people typically imagine. She’s a pure vegetarian, never smoked or drank—just lived a simple, quiet life. Now she’s in constant discomfort, with good days becoming rare. And watching that is unbearable. I work in a big company and had all my hopes on corporate insurance. But then came the shock— Parkinson's treatment for employee parents isn't covered. That one clause shattered me. Parkinson's mostly affects the elderly. If parents aren't covered, what's even the point of including the disease in the policy? It's disheartening to know the system fails where it's needed most. Doctors suggested Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) as the best shot for improvement. But the cost runs into lakhs - completely unaffordable for a middle-class family like ours. Even my PF withdrawal won't cover 5% of it. I'm doing everything I can-but the emotional and financial toll is huge. It's affecting my career, my mental health, and my ability to focus. I carry the weight of feeling helpless every single day Parkinson's isn't just a neurological disorder. It's pain. It's watching your mother suffer while being unable to help. It's fighting a system that turns away when you need it the most. We're not asking for sympathy. We're asking for awareness, for policy change, and for dignity-for patients and caregivers.

Confessions91