$SIA(C6L.SI)$ 🛫📉SIA Drops Hard! Earnings Turbulence or Prime Accumulation Zone?📊🛬

I’m tracking Singapore Airlines (SGX: C6L) after a brutal earnings shock sent the stock into a steep dive, closing down 7.37% on 29Jul25 to S$7.04. Q1 FY2026 net profit plummeted 58.8% YoY to S$186M, spooked by Air India-related associate losses and falling interest income. Even with revenue rising 1.5% to S$4.8B and a record 10.3M passengers carried (+6.9% YoY), investors weren’t buying the narrative.

I’m dissecting this move from every angle. On the surface, SIA still boasts a solid 87.6% group load factor and one of the healthiest balance sheets in the global aviation space. But the decline in passenger yields (–2.9%) and management’s warning around cargo weakness, macro pressures, and tariff disruptions have cast shadows over what was once clear-sky optimism.

I am watching the technical setup evolve rapidly. On the weekly chart, price collapsed from a 52-week high of S$7.63 straight through the 5-day (S$7.27) and 10-day (S$7.12) moving averages, nearly tagging the 20MA (S$6.90) intraday before closing at S$7.05. A sharp bearish engulfing candle formed, wiping out two weeks of gains in one session. The 30MA (S$6.77) is now a critical line in the sand.

Now layer in the 4-hour chart. The stock has flushed below the lower Bollinger and Keltner Bands, breaching EMA 13, 21, and 55 with conviction. This is the first major volatility expansion since the April breakdown, and it signals institutional de-risking. Volume confirms it; 29.78M shares traded, significantly above normal. This is not retail panic. It’s portfolio rotation.

RSI(6) sits at 46.81, down from recent highs above 70. MACD still shows a positive crossover (DIF 0.195 vs DEA 0.162), but momentum is fading fast. The histogram has started to roll over. If the MACD line crosses under next week, it may signal a deeper retracement, especially if S$7.00 doesn’t hold.

I’m evaluating the valuation floor here. The stock trades at 8.26x trailing P/E, 1.36x P/B, and 1.09x P/S, with a dividend yield of 6.82% on a S$0.48 payout. It’s got a fortress balance sheet, with S$3.02B in equity and minimal leverage compared to global peers like Lufthansa or Delta.

Structurally, the story hasn’t collapsed. Fleet upgrades are on track. ESG positioning remains a differentiator. KrisFlyer and Scoot offer data leverage and low-cost exposure. Long-term tailwinds from India’s Vistara merger and ASEAN demand are intact.

But the technicals say respect the breakdown. This could either be a one-off earnings miss or the start of EPS compression into FY2026. With volume peaking and volatility spiking, I’m watching for a high-velocity retest of the S$6.60–6.80 region, where the 30W MA and prior breakout base align.

Would I bottom-fish under S$7? Not yet. I’m waiting to see if MACD confirms a rollover, and whether S$6.94 (session low) holds on retest. If that breaks, the next true demand shelf is near S$6.60. Bulls need a weekly close back above S$7.12 to regain control. Until then, this is a falling knife with a dividend.

So here’s what I’m asking: Is Singapore Airlines under S$7 a fundamentally supported entry or are we flying blind through earnings turbulence? Are we pricing in a temporary air pocket or structural downgrade?

📢 Don’t miss out! Like, Repost and Follow me for exclusive setups, cutting-edge trends, and insights that move markets 🚀📈 I’m obsessed with hunting down the next big movers and sharing strategies that crush it. Let’s outsmart the market and stack those gains together! 🍀

Trade like a boss! Happy trading ahead, Cheers, BC 📈🚀🍀🍀🍀

@Tiger_comments @TigerStars @TigerPicks @TigerWire @Tiger_comments @Tiger_Earnings @SGX_Stars 

# SIA Tumbles for 3 Days! At What Price to Buy the Dip?

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

Report

Comment20

  • Top
  • Latest
  • 1PC
    ·07-29
    TOP
    Reply
    Report
    Fold Replies
    • Barcode
      Thanks for reading 1PC 🍀
      07-30
      Reply
      Report
  • Porter Harry
    ·07-29
    TOP
    Nice analysis!👍 Deep dips always give a chance to buy in and with the economics improving, the aviation industry will return to a growth trajectory.
    Reply
    Report
    Fold Replies
    • Barcode
      What I’m watching closely is yield deterioration despite rising volumes. That signals competitive saturation rather than pure macro drag. For SIA, the long-term trajectory remains constructive, particularly with exposure to India via Vistara and the strength of the KrisFlyer ecosystem.
      07-30
      Reply
      Report
    • Barcode
      In short, I’m optimistic long term, but I wouldn’t treat this dip as automatic upside without confirmation on both the chart and the earnings front.
      07-31
      Reply
      Report
    • Barcode
      But until we see cargo profitability firm up or a decisive shift in passenger pricing power, I think the market will struggle to reprice the growth premium back in.
      07-31
      Reply
      Report
    View more 3 comments
  • IXC
    ·07-30
    TOP
    SQ have strong brand equity and long term customer trust. Fundamentals are still strong, nothing changes, sg sovereign funds will probably see this an opportunity to accumulate.
    Reply
    Report
    Fold Replies
    • Barcode
      In the short term, technical levels matter. If this week’s close fails to hold above the 30MA or we see MACD momentum turn, we could retest the May lows. But structurally, you’re right: nothing’s broken. It’s about patience and positioning, not panic.
      07-30
      Reply
      Report
    • Barcode
      But if yield erosion persists and cargo fails to rebound, even long-term holders might demand more clarity on forward margin protection.
      07-30
      Reply
      Report
    • Barcode
      That’s a solid point, and I agree SIA’s brand equity and institutional trust remain intact. The fundamentals haven’t collapsed—they’ve simply been pressured by cyclical forces like cargo normalization and competitive yield compression.
      07-30
      Reply
      Report
    View more 3 comments
  • Tui Jude
    ·07-30
    TOP
    The Singapore flight attendants are always so lovely 💗
    Reply
    Report
    Fold Replies
    • Barcode
      Thanks for reading TJ. Agree they totally do!
      07-30
      Reply
      Report
  • Singapore Girl, you’re a great way to fly 😻
    Reply
    Report
    Fold Replies
    • Barcode
      Thanks for reading CCW. Used to love that ad.
      07-30
      Reply
      Report