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Starting with S$10,000? You do not need complicated strategies or dozens of stocks. This five-step guide shows you how to set your investment goal, choose the right mix of companies, build a strong core with Singapore stocks and stay invested with confidence through 2026 and beyond.
This week’s Smart Reads highlights REITs raising payouts, dividend stocks paying in December, and key risks income investors should watch. We also revisit Keppel’s decade-long returns and spotlight US growth names built for the next decade.
Seatrium wins BP deepwater contract, Apple nears smartphone lead, Alibaba’s cloud grows on AI demand, and Jardine Matheson maintains guidance.
Here’s how to turn small, steady investments into a reliable dividend stream — one month, one stock, one payout at a time.
Discover the three Singapore dividend stocks to watch this December as resilient earnings, steady cash flows and smart capital allocation support sustainable payouts.
Three Mapletree REITs and Frasers Logistics will distribute over S$400 million this December, but only one managed to raise its DPU.
Popular
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.
Singtel’s (SGX: Z74) Australian subsidiary Optus faces mounting crises with network outages. Can the telco maintain dividends?
Discover if high-yielding REITs like AIMS APAC, CapitaLand China Trust, and United Hampshire US REIT are true bargains or hidden traps for income investors.
Stocks
For income investors, the sweet spot lies between yield and growth, and these three Singapore stocks strike that balance in 2026.
CICT and FCT are popular income REITs, but a closer look at fundamentals reveals which may offer stronger long-term value.
With the local market’s board lot size planned for another reduction since 2015, higher-priced stocks with great fundamentals are poised to benefit from the increased liquidity.
As borrowing costs ease, some dividend stocks stand to benefit more than others through stronger cash flows and improved payout sustainability.

















