As seen on:
As seen on:














Latest Articles
Can a stock portfolio truly replace CPF or property for retirement? We break down how dividend income and capital growth can fund a comfortable retirement.
You know what REITs are and how to evaluate them. Now here’s your step-by-step blueprint for building a portfolio that generates steady income for years to come.
CPF provides a solid foundation, but investors can earn more by adding dependable dividend stocks. Cash-rich companies like UOB, HRnetGroup and SGX offer stable payouts, strong balance sheets and steady CPF-beating income for long-term wealth building.
Building a dividend-powered retirement isn’t about chasing high yields, it’s about owning reliable businesses that can keep paying you for decades.
From SGX to DBS and ST Engineering, these blue-chip heavyweights continue to offer resilient dividends and long-term growth for investors in 2026.
Not all REITs are created equal. Here’s how to tell the difference between a solid income generator and a potential value trap.
Popular
There’s nothing better than having cash drop into your bank account like clockwork.
Three blue-chip stalwarts are buying back their own shares, a signal that they believe that their stock is undervalued.
Income investors take note: these four blue-chip stocks are paying out more than just their core dividends.
The Straits Times Index (SGX: ^STI) has slipped below the 4,300 mark, after spending most of September above this level.
Stocks
Keppel DC REIT and Keppel Corporation offer very different risk-return profiles — here’s how to decide which Keppel stock best fits your investment goals.
Get Smart: When Your Dividend Stocks Disagree: A Masterclass in Portfolio Diversification
Dividend changes aren’t always good or bad. Here’s what DBS, OCBC and UOB’s different dividend moves really reveal about strategy and strength.
Bear markets can feel terrifying, but selling everything at the wrong time may do more harm than good — here’s how smart investors respond when markets fall.
These three SGX-listed companies are set to reward shareholders next month – but their latest results reveal very different pictures of dividend sustainability.
















