A dividend is only as reliable as the cash flow behind it.
Think of it like a household budget; it’s not just about what you earn, but what’s left over after the bills are paid.
Three SGX-listed companies — HRnetGroup (SGX: CHZ), VICOM (SGX: WJP) and Valuetronics (SGX: BN2) — are currently standing on very firm ground.
Each closed their latest reporting period with zero debt and cash reserves that comfortably exceed their dividend commitments.
More tellingly, all three are generating positive free cash flow, which is the true lifeblood of any sustainable payout.
HRnetGroup – Recruitment Powerhouse, Cash Fortress
To understand why HRnetGroup is a favourite for income seekers, you have to look at its fortress of a balance sheet.
The group ended FY2025 with S$262.9 million in cash and not a cent of debt.
That net cash position is not a windfall — it is the product of consistent cash generation.
For FY2025, the recruitment and staffing specialist churned out S$52.0 million in free cash flow, up 5.3% year on year (YoY), confirming the pile is being replenished rather than drawn down even as they reward shareholders.
The operating numbers support the cash story.
Revenue grew 3.0% YoY to S$584.0 million, while profit attributable to owners rose 15.0% to S$51.2 million.
Naturally, dividend growth followed in lockstep.
HRnetGroup raised its total payout 5.0% to S$0.042 per share for FY2025.
At a closing price of S$0.72, the trailing yield stands at 5.8%.
Since free cash flow comfortably covered the dividend commitment, the payout looks incredibly well-anchored.
Plus, that S$262.9 million cash war chest leaves scope for further increases or capital returns down the road.
VICOM – Steady Income, Normalising Capex
VICOM’s free cash flow might look like it took a dip, falling 16.8% YoY to S$19.2 million for FY2025, but context is everything.
This decline was driven entirely by elevated capital expenditure of S$39.0 million tied to the one-off On-Board Unit (OBU) installation project for Electronic Road Pricing 2.0.
The underlying cash engine remains intact: the group closed the year with S$57.9 million in cash and no debt on its books.
The headline results were exceptional.
Revenue surged 40.1% YoY to S$167.4 million, while profit attributable to shareholders jumped 45.1% to S$42.5 million.
While these gains were partially offset by higher subcontractor fees, staff costs, and a S$2.1 million goodwill impairment charge, they allowed VICOM to declare total dividends of S$0.084 per share for FY2025, a significant step up from S$0.058 paid out in FY2024.
While the OBU revenue will likely taper off now that installations are mostly done, capital expenditure should normalise from 2026.
Furthermore, the new integrated testing hub at Jalan Papan is expected to come on stream in the second half of 2026, expanding non-vehicle testing capacity.
As spending drops and new revenue streams come online, we should see free cash flow strengthen, making the dividend trajectory more resilient than a one-time project spike might suggest.
Valuetronics – Strategic Shift, Massive Liquidity
Valuetronics carries perhaps the most striking balance sheet of the three.
As at 30 September 2025, the electronics manufacturing services provider held HK$1.11 billion in cash with zero bank borrowings.
This is the result of years of disciplined management, ensuring the company can weather almost any storm.
For the first half of FY2026 (1HFY2026), free cash flow rose by 21.4% to HK$64.0 million, largely because it didn’t have to spend as much on its Vietnam facility as it did in the prior year.
Operationally, the company is undergoing a very smart transformation.
Its Industrial and Commercial Electronics segment grew by 5.7% to HK$706.7 million, thanks to new customers in high-growth areas like computing cooling products.
Meanwhile, it deliberately let its Consumer Electronics revenue drop by 32.8% to HK$129.9 million.
Why? Because the company is phasing out low-margin legacy products to focus on more profitable work.
This strategic shift is already paying off, with gross margins climbing from 16.8% to 18.8%.
Even with a slight dip in operating cash flow due to inventory building and lower interest income from Fed rate cuts, the company remains incredibly liquid.
For the period, Valuetronics declared a combined interim and special dividend of HK$0.08 per share.
For investors, the combination of a massive cash pile, zero debt, and a shift toward higher-margin business makes this an electronics play that is built to last.
Get Smart: Prioritising Cash Over Yield
A high dividend yield is easy to find on any stock screener.
What is far harder to find — and far more valuable for income investors — is a dividend backed by zero debt and growing free cash flow.
This trio each carries no bank borrowings and generate cash well in excess of their dividend commitments.
For those building a resilient income portfolio, that combination is worth more than any headline yield figure alone.
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Disclosure: Calvina L. does not own any of the stocks mentioned. Chin Hui Leong contributed to the article and owns shares of VICOM and HRnetGroup.



