Market Snapshot
Singapore stocks opened lower on Wednesday. STI fell 0.7%; NIO fell nearly 5%; UOB, SIA, DBS fell around 1%.
Stocks to Watch
Singtel: The telecommunications operator’s net profit for the first half ended September fell 42.4 per cent year on year to S$1.23 billion from S$2.14 billion, in the absence of a S$1.2 billion exceptional gain booked in the same period a year prior. On Wednesday, Singtel’s board declared an interim dividend of S$0.07 per share, up from S$0.052 in H2 of FY2024. Shares of Singtel closed 1.3 per cent or S$0.04 lower at S$3.16 on Tuesday.
Bumitama Agri: The Indonesian palm oil producer’s net profit for the third quarter ended Sep 30 fell 31.6 per cent to 598 billion rupiah (S$51 million), from 874 billion rupiah the year prior. On Wednesday, the company noted that its operational output has gone down mainly due to negative effects from extreme weather conditions in past years. The counter closed flat at S$0.84 on Tuesday.
The Hour Glass: The luxury watch retailer’s earnings for the first half of fiscal year 2025 ended Sep 30 fell 20 per cent to S$61.4 million, from S$77 million in the previous corresponding period. This comes amid higher operating expenses, with more advertising and promotional activities, depreciation of right-of-use-assets and loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment driving expenses. Shares of The Hour Glass closed up 0.7 per cent or S$0.01 at S$1.54 on Tuesday, before the announcement.
Bukit Sembawang: The property developer’s earnings for the first half of FY2025 ended Sep 30 surged 149 per cent to S$62.9 million, from S$25.2 million in the previous corresponding period. Its gross profit for the period also rose 128 per cent on the year, due to higher recognised profits on development projects. Its shares closed up 0.3 per cent or S$0.01 to S$3.56 on Tuesday, before the release of its results.
Boustead Singapore: The infrastructure-related engineering and technology group on Tuesday posted a 34 per cent increase in net profit to S$36 million for its first half of FY2025 ended Sep 30. This comes amid higher gross profit and interest income, as well as a reversal of impairment loss. The counter closed at S$1.03 on Tuesday, down S$0.01 or 1 per cent.
Valuetronics: The integrated electronic manufacturing services provider on Wednesday reported HK$90.5 million (S$15.6 million) in net profit for its first half of the fiscal year, up 10.2 per cent year on year from HK$82.1million. Its board declared an interim dividend of HKS$0.04 per share on top of a special dividend of the same amount. The counter rose S$0.01 or 1.6 per cent to close at S$0.635 on Tuesday.
Yoma Strategic: The Myanmar-focused company’s net loss for the first-half ended September widened to US$11 million, from US$2.5 million in the previous corresponding period. This comes as revenue fell due to a depreciation of the Myanmar Kyat by more than 55 per cent, as well as higher finance costs. The counter closed 1.3 per cent or S$0.001 lower at S$0.07 on Tuesday.
SG Local News
More Singapore Savings Bonds, T-Bills to Be Issued
Singapore will issue up to another S$450 billion in government securities – including Singapore Savings Bonds (SSBs) and Treasury Bills (T-Bills) – with the government’s issuance limit now raised to S$1.515 trillion, from S$1.065 trillion previously.
A parliamentary motion to raise this limit, under the Government Securities (Debt Market and Investment) Act (GSA), was passed on Tuesday (Nov 12).
The new limit is expected to last until 2029, said Second Minister for Finance Chee Hong Tat.
Shopee-Owner Sea Surpasses Revenue Estimates on Steady E-Commerce Demand
Sea Ltd beat third-quarter revenue estimates on Tuesday, helped by steady growth in its e-commerce, entertainment and financial services businesses, sending shares of the Southeast Asian technology firm up more than 10%.
Shopee achieved adjusted core profit in the third quarter in Asia and Brazil, said Sea CEO Forrest Li.
The application is available mostly in South East Asia and Brazil after exiting India, and some markets in Europe and Latin America.
Billionaire’s Singapore Property Firm Frasers Sees Earnings Jump
Frasers Property Ltd., the developer controlled by Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, saw full-year earnings rise, led by higher residential contributions from China and Australia.
Attributable profit climbed 19% to S$206.3 million ($154 million) in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, the Singapore-based company said in an exchange filing Wednesday. That compared with S$173.1 million reported last year.
The profit jump was also helped by valuation gains on Singapore properties and industrial and logistics real estate in Europe and Australia, although they were partially offset by valuation losses on commercial assets in the UK and Australia. Revenue rose almost 7% to S$4.2 billion from a year earlier, beating a consensus analyst estimate of S$3.65 billion.
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