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Latest Articles
CPF offers attractive risk-free interest rates, but some investors use CPFIS in search of higher long-term returns through stocks, exchange-traded funds and unit trusts.
Genting Singapore is debt-free, sitting on S$3.2 billion in cash and yielding around 6.6% — yet its shares are near a 10-year low. We ask the only question that matters for income investors: can the dividend last?
Get Smart: The Money Lesson We Were Never Taught: Teaching Kids About Saving, Spending and Investing
A small dividend can help children understand a big investing idea: a share is ownership in a real business.
The first S$100,000 is often the hardest milestone to reach, but disciplined saving, investing, and compounding can accelerate wealth creation before age 30.
Singapore companies bought back a record S$1.26 billion of shares in the first five months of 2026 — and three blue chips did most of the buying. Here’s what Singtel, OCBC and Keppel’s repurchases really tell dividend investors.
Building a university fund with stocks requires more than chasing returns – it means choosing resilient businesses that can compound steadily over many years.
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Get Smart: The Money Lesson We Were Never Taught: Teaching Kids About Saving, Spending and Investing
A small dividend can help children understand a big investing idea: a share is ownership in a real business.
The first S$100,000 is often the hardest milestone to reach, but disciplined saving, investing, and compounding can accelerate wealth creation before age 30.
Singapore companies bought back a record S$1.26 billion of shares in the first five months of 2026 — and three blue chips did most of the buying. Here’s what Singtel, OCBC and Keppel’s repurchases really tell dividend investors.
Building a university fund with stocks requires more than chasing returns – it means choosing resilient businesses that can compound steadily over many years.
Stocks
We look at a record AI funding round backed by Singapore’s sovereign funds, a major new power plant for a local blue-chip, a hospitality REIT divestment, and Warren Buffett’s deepening bet on Big Tech.
At 25, the biggest investing advantage is time – but deciding how much of your money should go into stocks depends on your goals, risk tolerance, and financial foundation.
These three SGX-listed REITs offer trailing yields of 7% or more – but can their latest quarterly results back up those payouts?
The Straits Times Index barely budged in May. These three blue chips left it far behind — and the reasons say more about their businesses than the market mood.
Getting Started
At 25, the greatest investing advantage is not money or expertise, but time and the power of long-term compounding.
Markets are noisy again. Here’s how long-term investors can stay focused, disciplined, and prepared.
Your 20s are the best time to start investing, but avoiding a few common mistakes can make a huge difference to your long-term wealth.
Starting to invest at 25 gives you one major advantage: time. Here’s a beginner-friendly guide to building wealth through stocks, ETFs, and long-term compounding.

















