Leading Banking Lawyers & Firms by Reported Cases — Singapore

13 reported cases · February 2023 to June 2026

Updated

What did Singapore courts decide in Banking?

Singapore courts issued 13 reported Banking judgments between 2023–2026, most in SGHC (8), of the 6 with a parseable operative disposition, the most common was Claim dismissed (2), the median monetary award recorded was $103,893. This is a descriptive summary of what the courts recorded in reported decisions, not legal advice.

Reported cases 13 (2023–2026)
By year 2026 (1) · 2025 (3) · 2024 (5) · 2023 (4)
By court SGHC (8) · SGCA (2) · SGHC(A) (2) · SGSCT (1)
Outcomes (6 parseable) Claim dismissed (2) · Acquitted (1) · Appeal allowed (1) · Appeal dismissed (1) · Application granted (1)
Median monetary award $103,893 (across 2 awards)

Compiled from 13 reported Banking judgments published on eLitigation. Counts and figures are derived from the judgments themselves; the Attorney-General's Chambers is excluded from the counsel and firm counts as the public prosecutor.

Outcome data updated

Across 13 reported Banking judgments in Singapore courts (February 2023 to June 2026), Allen & Gledhill LLP is the most active firm by reported case count (4 cases), Hing Shan Shan Blossom is the most active lawyer (1 case appearances). This ranks named firms and lawyers by how often they appear in reported decisions — a descriptive count of activity, not an assessment of quality or standing.

Overview

Banking appears in 13 reported Singapore judgments (2023–2026). The most common sub-topics are Banker’s books — Proceedings — Civil (2), Credit cards — Unauthorised transactions — Phishing scam — Apportionment of loss—Whether the customer acted with gross negligence (1) and Performance bonds — Restraining beneficiary from calling on standby letter of credit on ground of unconscionability (1). The most active judge by reported case count is Goh Yihan (4 cases) and the most active firm is Allen & Gledhill LLP (4 cases).

Which law firms handle the most Banking cases in Singapore?

Allen & Gledhill LLP leads in Banking with 4 cases between February 2023 and June 2026, followed by Rajah & Tann Singapore LLP (3 cases) and Drew & Napier LLC (2 cases). 22 firms appeared in Banking cases during this period.

Who are the leading Banking lawyers in Singapore?

Hing Shan Shan Blossom is the most active Banking lawyer in Singapore with 1 case appearances between February 2023 and June 2026, followed by Lin Weiqi Wendy (1) and Jill Ann Koh Ying (Xu Ying) (1).

Which judges handle the most Banking cases in Singapore?

Goh Yihan has handled 4 Banking cases between February 2023 and June 2026, the most of any Singapore judge. Steven Chong (2 cases) and Judith Prakash (2 cases) are also among the most active.

How many Banking cases are reported in Singapore courts?

13 reported Singapore judgments (2023–2026) involve Banking, most often decided by Goh Yihan.

What are the main sub-topics in Singapore Banking cases?

The main sub-topics are Banker’s books — Proceedings — Civil (2), Credit cards — Unauthorised transactions — Phishing scam — Apportionment of loss—Whether the customer acted with gross negligence (1) and Performance bonds — Restraining beneficiary from calling on standby letter of credit on ground of unconscionability (1).

Case Volume by Year

4
23
5
24
3
25
1
26
2023–2026

Key Issues & Sub-Topics

Credit cards — Unauthorised transactions — Phishing scam — Apportionment of loss—Whether the customer acted with gross negligence 1 case

Performance bonds — Restraining beneficiary from calling on standby letter of credit on ground of unconscionability 1 case

Performance bonds — Restraining beneficiary from calling on standby letter of credit on ground of discrepancies in documents tendered 1 case

Credit and security — Scope of duty of bank when exercising its right to liquidate collaterals 1 case

Quincecare duty — Juridical basis of the Quincecare duty — Whether bank breached its Quincecare duty 1 case

Letters of credit — Fraud exception — Irregularities on the face of bills of lading — Whether fraud exception established 1 case

Letters of credit — Nullity exception — Irregularities on the face of bills of lading — Whether nullity exception established 1 case

Statement of account — Verification clauses — Whether verification clause binding on issuer 1 case

Branch bank — Whether representative office was branch bank — Whether plaintiff had standing to sue 1 case

Key Statutes

cited in 7 cases
cited in 3 cases
Restructuring and Dissolution Act
cited in 2 cases
Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act
cited in 2 cases
Banking Act
cited in 2 cases
cited in 1 case
cited in 1 case
cited in 1 case
cited in 1 case
cited in 1 case
cited in 1 case
cited in 1 case

Court Distribution

Cases

Methodology & disclaimer

Firms and lawyers are ranked by the number of reported Supreme Court judgments they appear in, published on eLitigation. Counts reflect appearances in reported decisions only — unreported matters, settlements, and advisory work are not included. This is a descriptive count of activity by reported case volume, not an assessment of quality or standing, and not an endorsement or recommendation of any firm or lawyer. It is information, not legal advice.