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Latest Articles
Discover five global dividend stocks that offer stable income, resilient cash flows, and long-term diversification beyond Singapore’s market.
Three Singapore blue chips delivered standout first-half results—here’s what dividend investors need to know.
This week’s Smart Reads looks at whether SGX’s rally signals a dividend boom, income stocks yielding more than banks, and REITs that could raise payouts in 2026. We also cover special dividends, quarterly-paying stocks, and US dividend names worth knowing.
On the dock: Singapore’s economic growth forecast, a data centre REIT’s acquisition of remaining stakes in two properties, and a consortium’s top bid for a mega mixed-use project.
December spending adds up fast. Steady dividends from strong Singapore stocks can feel like a quiet Christmas bonus when it matters most.
Can these three Singapore blue-chip stocks ride the market momentum into a year-end rally? We look at their fundamentals and what could drive their next leg up.
Popular
Inflation eats into our money, but by understanding it better and investing wisely, we can fight it to grow our wealth.
Three Singapore REITs are first to the earnings dock, each offering different insight.
Can dividends beat inflation on their own? We take a look at CICT, DBS, OCBC and Parkway Life REIT to show which yields actually sustain.
Despite market headwinds, these five Singapore REITs delivered higher DPUs, showing that quality assets and prudent management still pay off.
Stocks
With markets near highs and interest rates shifting, building a resilient portfolio matters more than chasing the next big winner.
A stock that has doubled or tripled feels like a sell signal, but the right decision depends on fundamentals, valuation, and portfolio balance — not just the size of the gain.
3 Singapore Stocks to Watch as the Market Nears All-Time Highs (BRC Asia, Kimly, Innotek)
As Singapore stocks approach record levels, these three companies stand out for their resilient fundamentals and ability to perform even when markets are expensive.
Large capital gains can tempt investors to sell, but the right decision depends on fundamentals, income needs, and long-term goals — not just how much a stock has risen.

















