May was a quiet month for the Straits Times Index (SGX: ^STI).
The benchmark inched up just 1.63%, the kind of move that barely registers on a year-end chart.
Three of its thirty constituents had other ideas.
SATS, Venture Corporation and DBS Group each posted results during the month that put a long-running question to rest.
And in every case, the answer pointed the same way: the gains were built on recurring, structurally-driven earnings rather than a one-off bounce.
The market noticed. While the index drifted, these three pulled away.
Here’s what was behind the moves.
SATS: Is the global transformation finally paying off?
For two years, the question that hung over SATS Ltd. (SGX: S58) was whether its 2023 acquisition of Worldwide Flight Services could turn sheer scale – more than 225 stations across 27 countries – into something shareholders could bank on.
Its fiscal 2026 results (FY2026), covering the year to 31 March 2026, gave the clearest ‘yes’ yet.
Revenue rose 9.0% year on year (YoY) to a record S$6.3 billion.
Net profit attributable to shareholders climbed 17.0% to S$285.2 million, and operating profit margin widened from 8.2% to 8.6% – a sign the enlarged platform is starting to carry its own weight.
But the number that matters most to income investors sits further down.
Free cash flow, the lifeblood of dividends, reached S$685.5 million, up 2.4% even as the group stepped up capital expenditure.
That cushion let management lift the total dividend to S$0.07 per share, a 40% jump on the year before.
The engine was Gateway Services, where revenue grew 10.8% to S$5.0 billion.
Cargo volumes hit 9.7 million tonnes, up 7.0%, outpacing IATA industry benchmarks for ten quarters running.
Strength in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia – up 15.3% – more than absorbed a 5.0% slip in the Americas tied to tariff softness.
The transformation, it turns out, is paying off in cash.
That tends to get a stock noticed.
Venture Corporation: Are the green shoots real?
Venture Corporation Limited (SGX: V03) came into 2026 carrying a different burden: a contract manufacturer waiting out a cyclical trough, with investors unsure when demand would turn.
Its first-quarter results (1Q2026) suggested the wait was over.
Revenue edged up 1.9% YoY to S$628.5 million, with earnings per share rising 0.9% to 19.5 Singapore cents and net profit of S$56.3 million on a healthy 9.0% net margin.
The headline growth looks modest – until you strip out the currency drag.
On a constant-currency basis, revenue would have risen 8.2%, a far better read on the underlying business.
The lift came from Portfolio B, which added S$42 million on robust demand for AI-related infrastructure across its test and measurement, networking, and semiconductor equipment domains.
That offset a S$30 million decline in Portfolio A, where consumer lifestyle volumes fell after a customer improved a key product’s reliability.
What about the balance sheet that funds Venture’s dividends?
It held firm, with a net cash position above S$1.0 billion even after heftier dividends and buybacks in 2025.
Management likened the quarter to new shoots in early spring and expects them to keep growing through the year.
Two notes for the cautious.
Free cash flow wasn’t disclosed at this reporting cadence, so the cash-conversion picture is incomplete.
And no dividend was declared – though that simply reflects Venture’s long-standing habit of paying at the half-year and full-year marks, not a change of heart.
DBS Group: Can fees carry the franchise as rates roll over?
DBS Group Holdings Ltd (SGX: D05) posted the smallest beat of the three, yet arguably the most instructive one.
Its 8.9% return came in a quarter when the easy tailwind – high interest rates – was clearly fading.
Total income still hit a record S$5.95 billion, up 1% YoY despite rate headwinds and a stronger Singapore dollar.
The strain showed where you’d expect: net interest income (NII) eased 5% to S$3.49 billion as net interest margin (NIM) narrowed 23 basis points to 1.89%.
So what held the line? Fees.
Non-interest income rose 10% to S$2.45 billion, powered by record wealth management fees of S$907 million and record treasury customer sales of S$592 million, while net fee and commission income jumped 16% to S$1.48 billion.
Loans grew 4% to S$453.2 billion, and the non-performing loan (NPL) ratio improved to 1.0%.
Profit growth was slim – net profit attributable to shareholders edged up 1% to S$2.93 billion, with return on equity at a robust 17.0%, as expenses rose 4% on staff costs.
The market looked past the thin profit line to the answer underneath: the franchise can grow even when rates work against it.
Income investors got their own answer.
The board declared a 1Q2026 dividend of S$0.81 per share – an ordinary dividend of S$0.66 plus a Capital Return dividend of S$0.15.
That is 8% above the S$0.75 paid a year earlier, with the ordinary portion doing the heavy lifting.
Get Smart: The Market Rewards Answered Questions
Look past the three different industries and one pattern holds.
Each of these stocks spent months under a cloud – was the acquisition worth it, has the cycle turned, can the bank cope without rate tailwinds – and each used a single set of results to clear it.
Notice what the market chose to reward.
Not the loudest headline number, but the recurring engine beneath it: SATS’s cash generation, Venture’s constant-currency demand, DBS‘s fee income.
In a month when the index moved 1.63%, the businesses that proved their earnings were durable did the rest.
For the long-term investor, that is a more useful lesson than the league-table position.
Share prices answer the questions that matter, eventually.
The work is knowing which question each business still has to answer.
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Disclosure: The Smart Investor owns shares of DBS.



