Blue-chip stocks are supposed to be the “safe money.”
It’s the boring but reliable foundation of every sensible portfolio.
But here’s the problem:
Most investors treat blue-chips like they’re magical wealth-preservation machines that never break down.
That’s dangerous thinking, and it’s costing people money.
When you believe these myths, you either miss out on profitable opportunities or get blindsided by risks you never saw coming.
If you want to avoid those mistakes, you’ll want to be aware of these 3 myths about blue-chip stocks.
Myth 1: Blue-Chips Are Always Safe and Risk-Free
Here’s what investors tell themselves: “It’s a blue-chip. How risky could it be?”
But the truth is, even giants stumble.
Take Singtel (SGX: Z74).
As competition intensified and 5G costs piled up, Singtel’s EBIT (earnings before interest and taxes) margin slipped from 32% a decade ago in FY2015 to 19% in FY2021, before clawing back some ground in recent years. And that’s with operating revenue that has not grown. The company’s scale helped it survive, but not escape, the strain.1
Or look at CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (SGX: C38U).
When interest rates shot up and hybrid work reshaped office demand, borrowing costs rose and rental growth slowed. Its portfolio stayed largely occupied, but investors felt the pressure in unit prices all the same.2
The lesson is clear:
Blue-chip status doesn’t grant immunity from sector disruptions, regulatory changes, or plain old mismanagement.
Myth 2: Blue-Chips Don’t Deliver Growth, Only Stability
Truth: Some blue-chips continue to deliver strong growth even at scale.
It’s easy to assume that once a company gets big, its best growth days are behind it. But scale can be an advantage, not a limit.
Blue-chips often have what smaller players don’t. They have deep pockets, global reach, and the ability to reinvent themselves.
They can buy new technology instead of building it from scratch.
They can expand into new markets without stretching their balance sheets.
And they can attract top talent who know how to turn mature businesses into growth engines again.
Take ST Engineering (SGX: S63). Despite being one of Singapore’s most established companies, it’s still expanding through aerospace and defence contracts worldwide.
In the first half of 2025, ST Engineering grew its revenue by 7.2% to S$5.9 billion, and lifted net profit by nearly 20% to S$403 million.
In fact, from 2019 to 2024, the company grew its revenue and net profit by a total of 43% and 22%, respectively.
Or look at DBS Group (SGX: D05).
The bank is growing its digital banking and wealth-management business, boosting fees and cross-border income.
From 2019 to 2024, its dividends have risen by nearly 15% per year, doubling from S$1.11 per share to S$2.22 per share.4
The takeaway:
The size of some blue-chips give them resources to pivot, invest, and capture new opportunities. Ignore them, and you might overlook some of the market’s most powerful long-term compounders.
Myth 3: Blue-Chips Don’t Need Monitoring
No stock — not even the bluest of blue-chips — deserves a free pass from your attention.
When a company’s been paying dividends for decades, it’s tempting to assume it’ll keep doing so forever. You buy, collect the payouts, and stop checking the numbers.
But business conditions change, even for household names such as Mapletree Logistics Trust (SGX: M44U).
For years, MLT was seen as one of the more dependable Singapore REITs. It boasted high occupancy of around 95.7%, solid tenants, steady distributions, and predictable growth.
But in 2025, things shifted. Its distribution per unit (DPU) for the first quarter of FY25/26 (Q1 FY25/26) fell by over 12.4% year-on-year, even as the REIT’s yield still looked attractive on paper.
The problem came down to a mix of factors.
Rising finance costs played a part. The trust’s borrowing expenses crept up to about S$39.4 million for the quarter, meaning more income was being consumed by interest payments.
Last year’s results had also been propped up by one-off gains from property divestments, but those boosts were lower in Q1 FY25/2.
When borrowing costs climb, more cash gets eaten up by interest instead of being passed to investors as dividends.
And when parts of the portfolio underperform, rental income shrinks, further tightening the trust’s cash flow.
Together with the lack of any one-off windfalls, these factors squeezed the pool of distributable earnings that fund the DPU.
Even a blue-chip REIT like MLT wasn’t immune to shifting conditions. This is a reminder that you can’t just “buy and forget” even the most reliable dividend payers.
The takeaway:
The fundamentals that made blue-chips strong can weaken over time. Check your holdings the same way you’d service a car – regularly, before something breaks.
What This Means for Investors
Blue-chips remain excellent core holdings, but they’re not magical wealth-preservation devices.
You should evaluate them with the same scrutiny you’d give to any other stock:
• Review fundamentals quarterly.
• Compare dividend growth to earnings growth (a blue-chip showing stagnant earnings but rising dividends may raise a red flag).
• Monitor the competitive landscape, interest-rate/industry cycle risks, and management execution.
When you find blue-chips that are still growing, generating cash, and rewarding shareholders, you might have found something special. But the label alone doesn’t guarantee success.
Position sizing matters: you don’t have to bet everything on your blue-chip conviction. Start small, observe performance, and scale if conviction holds.
Get Smart: Build Your Foundation, But Keep Your Eyes Open
Blue-chip status is a starting point. These companies have resources, market positions and track records that smaller companies only hope for. But they’re still businesses operating in competitive markets with changing conditions.
The smarter approach is to treat blue-chips as the foundation of your portfolio that you make a plan to inspect and maintain.
Don’t let the “blue-chip” label lull you into complacency. The best wealth-builders combine blue-chip stability with active monitoring and smart position sizing.
Because at the end of the day, your portfolio’s job is to grow.
We’ve found 5 SGX-listed dividend stocks with strong track records in turbulent markets. If you want consistency in an uncertain world, start here.
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