News

UOL profits crashed 51% to $433.72m in FY2018

It was hit by lower development profits, which was offset by higher UOB dividend income.

Business receipts climbed 4.1% in Q4 2018

The infocomm segment’s business receipts led the growth and jumped 7.2%.

Keppel inks deal with Golar LNG for 30% stake in Gimi MS Corporation

Gimi MS will develop, construct and operate an FLNG facility on the Mauritania and Senegal maritime border.

9 in 10 graduates of Singapore's top universities hired within 6 months

The average gross monthly salary of those in full-time permanent employment rose to $3,733 from $3,613 in 2017.

CapitaLand to raise $1b for discretionary real estate debt fund

It will invest in USD-denominated instruments for real estate in China.

Olam buys 85% stake in Indonesia's largest cocoa processor for $121.31m

The acquisition will add 150,000 metric tonnes of cocoa bean processing and capacity.

Manufacturing output contracts for the first time since 2017

It shrank by 3.1% no thanks to declines in electronics and precision engineering.

Singapore loses out to Netherlands as world's most connected country: report

But the Lion City is expected to benefit from initiatives aiming to improve logistics and harmonise regulations. Singapore held its second position after the Netherlands for trade connectivity on the back of its policies that leverage on global connectedness, according to DHL’s latest Global Connectedness Index (GCI). The GCI report, which assessed the globalisation developments across 169 countries and territories since the Brexit referendum in the United Kingdom and the 2016 presidential election in the United States, found that Singapore was also one of the five countries where international flows exceeded expectations. The other countries included Cambodia, Malaysia, Mozambique and Vietnam. 

Sheng Siong's FY2018 profits inched up 1.4% to $70.79m

The strong performance was attributed to its 10 new stores.

Daily Briefing: HRnetgroup to expand services in China; Shopee's weak performance hits Sea's earnings

And dining platform Chope forged partnership with China’s food delivery giant Meituan-Dianping.

Chart of the Day: Singapore's three big banks' NIMs rose to an average 1.8% in 2018

DBS outperformed OCBC and UOB with its NIM widening 9 basis points due to lower funding costs. This chart from Moody’s Investor Services showed that the NIMs for Singapore’s three big banks comprising of DBS, OCBC and UOB rose to an average 1.8% in 2018 from 1.75% in 2017. DBS outperformed the other two with its NIM widening 9 basis points because of lower funding costs, compared with 5 basis points for OCBC, and 1 basis point decline for UOB. NIMs are set to stagnate in 2019 because interest rates will not rise as steeply as they did in 2018, given worsening economic prospects, Moody’s said. “Interest rates in Singapore typically move in tandem with US interest rates, and the pace of further rate increases in the US will slow in 2019, with the Fed turning more cautions with monetary policy tightening and balance sheet reductions,” they explained, adding that stiff competition amongst banks for new mortgage financing and refinancing will deter banks from raising loan rates, which in turn will constrain NIM improvements. “Further, low-cost current account savings account (CASA) deposits at the three banks are decreasing as depositors gravitate to higher yielding fixed deposits to take advantage of rising rates,” Moody’s said. “This shift will lead to higher funding costs and weigh on NIMs.” 

Wilmar's FY2018 profits dropped 5.7% to US$1.13b

It blamed the African swine fever outbreak in China and weaker commodity prices.

Infant formula market dries up as mothers return to breastfeeding: report

Nine in 10 mothers in Singapore engaged in either partial or full breastfeeding in 2018.

Venture's profits slipped 0.7% to $370m in FY2018

It was hit by its customers’ product transitions and M&A activities.

Go-Jek partners with insurtech firm Gigacover to provide driver insurance

It will cover driver-partners for medical leave of up to 21 days and hospitalisation leave of up to 84 days.