As tensions in the Middle East escalate, the once-shining halo of Dubai as a “safe-haven tax paradise” seems to be fading. Wealthy investors who once rushed there for tax advantages are now reportedly calling Singapore lawyers overnight to move money back.
A Singapore family-office lawyer revealed that about one-third of his 20 Dubai-based clients have already started procedures this week to shift assets out. The average net worth of these clients exceeds $50 million.
If Capital Flows Back, Who Wins in Singapore?
If this wave of risk-driven capital migration continues, several Singapore companies could be positioned to capture the inflow.
1️⃣ Banking Giants: AUM Boom
As Southeast Asia’s largest bank, $DBS(D05.SI)$ is a top choice for family-office funds.
The stock is currently consolidating around SGD 55.40. While management remains cautious with a wait-and-see stance, geopolitical uncertainty could actually reinforce its wealth-management moat.
$OCBC Bank(O39.SI)$ and $UOB(U11.SI)$ around SGD 20.75 and SGD 36.24, respectively. As long as capital inflows continue, wealth management fees and AUM growth could become a steady tailwind.
2️⃣ Property Brokers: The “Physical Vault” for Hot Money
$PropNex(OYY.SI)$ and $APAC Realty(CLN.SI)$
For many wealthy investors, Singapore real estate remains the simplest and safest store of wealth compared with complex financial instruments.
Although prices have recently pulled back, if Dubai’s tax appeal gives way to Singapore’s “security premium,” luxury property rentals and transaction volumes could rebound.
3️⃣ Defense Play: The Geopolitical Hedge
If banks and property are safe harbors for capital, $ST Engineering(S63.SI)$ is more like the “bulletproof vest” of this geopolitical cycle.
After Middle East tensions escalated last week, the stock surged nearly 9.8% and has continued hitting new all-time highs.
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Middle East orders are surging Analysts say the company aims to double international revenue by 2026, with the Middle East as a key battleground. In late February, it secured a SGD 470 million ground-platform maintenance contract in Qatar, seen as a gateway into Gulf defense markets.
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Structural rise in global defense spending Rising tensions between Iran, the U.S., and Israel are pushing countries to upgrade air-defense systems. ST Engineering currently holds a record SGD 33.2 billion order backlog, and analysts note:
“As long as geopolitical tensions persist, defense stocks remain structural winners.”
💬 Discussion
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Bank stocks vs. property stocks: If hot money flows into Singapore, which sector would you position in?
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Or would you follow the trend and buy defense leader ST Engineering?
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With KYC rules tightening globally, do you think Singapore might slightly relax family-office scrutiny to attract more capital?
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Comments
What I like is that the upside is very direct. More inflows mean higher deposits, rising AUM, and stronger fee income from wealth management. Compared with property plays, banks capture the financial flows themselves, not just the asset purchases.
Names like ST Engineering are interesting as a geopolitical hedge, but my safer positioning would still be the banks. If Singapore continues strengthening its role as a global safe-haven financial hub, the big three banks should be among the most consistent beneficiaries. 📈
@Tiger_SG @Tiger_comments @TigerStars @TigerClub
In a scenario where "hot money" (short-term, speculative capital) flows into
Singapore
, positioning depends on whether you seek immediate momentum or long-term structural gains.
As of early 2026, Singapore banks have successfully pivoted to fee-based income, with wealth management fees surging up to 44% to offset declining net interest margins (NIMs).
SREITs and property developers (like CDL) are gaining momentum as interest rates stabilize or decrease.
ST Engineering (SGX: S63)
Defensive Leadership: Often viewed as a "safe haven" during geopolitical volatility, such as the 2026 Middle East tensions
While analysts have raised target prices (some as high as S$13.00), others warn that its valuation—trading at over 3 standard deviations above its historical mean—may be "overheated".
Family Office Scrutiny & KYC Rules
There is no evidence that Singapore is relaxing KYC/AML rules. Instead, authorities have ramped up oversight following high-profile money laundering cases.
When money arrives, it needs a home & Singapore banks are basically the first place of capital parking. Strong balance sheets & fortress like liquidity.
Hot money loves banks because they are the gateway & the infrastructure. If global wealth is flowing in, DBS, OCBC & UOB feel it first.
Property stocks benefit too but only after the banks.
Foreign stocks don't immediately translate into REIT rallies but over time, confidence does.
Singapore is seen as the Swiss Vault of Asia, except with better food.
Will Singapore relax KYC for family offices?
Singapore will always protect its reputation first. That is non negotiable.
Let's just say Singapore is good at being strict but welcoming.
I would position my portfolio in our banks for the inflow, property for the long game & ST Engineering for defense.
@Tiger_SG @Tiger_comments
ST Engineering is currently the "darling" of the Straits Times Index (STI) due to the global shift toward defense spending.
Order Book: It hit a record S$33.2 billion in early 2026, providing high earnings visibility for years.
The Risk: The stock recently surged (up ~9% in a single day following Iran's threats). At a P/E ratio over 40x, it is historically expensive.
Strategy: It is a "Must-Hold" for defense exposure, but buying at current peaks carries high "correction risk" if geopolitical tensions cool.
2. Follow the trends in purchasing ai stocks
3. Ltd rules tightening do reduce profitability of money related stocks