Market/Sector/Industry Outlook in 2018 – On-going Updates

Jupiter2017

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Market/Sector/Industry Outlook in 2018 – On-going Updates
This thread for posting relevant updates throughout 2018 from Analysts/Experts, and for forum discussions. Any specific stock outlook should be posted in the specific stock thread and not to be posted here. For stock picks provided by Analysts at the beginning of 2018, refer to this thread link:
http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/s...gapore-stock-picks-2018-analysts-5740935.html
But, the old list become outdated over time, therefore, you should always refer to "On-going Updates".
***** Not a call to buy or sell. Dyodd (do your own due diligence) *****


Thread Index (current months postings) - refer to post#2 for Index (previous months postings)
Post# Title
#19 - Feb 06, 2018 Analysts welcome market correction; fundamentals, bull run still intact
#20 - Feb 06, 2018 Dow plunge: How is it affecting the Singapore stock market?
#21 - Feb 07, 2018 Brokers' take: CIMB puts out top-five 'shopping list' on market correction
#22 - Feb 07, 2018 Singapore office, retail rents to see strong growth over next few years: report
#24 - Feb 10, 2018 Oil skids to biggest weekly loss in 2 years amid market turmoil
#25 - Feb 11, 2018 Keep calm and stay invested
 
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Jupiter2017

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Thread Index (previous months postings)
Post# Title
#3 -- Jan 11, 2018 Strong fundamentals to support markets in 2018, but investors are skittish: DBS CEO
#4 -- Jan 12, 2018 Credit Suisse cautions on outlook for Singapore's surging Reits
#5 -- Jan 12, 2018 Broker's take: UOB Kay Hian downgrades telco sector to 'market
#7 -- Consumer Sector – RHB Invest 2018-01-04: This Year, We spend
#7 -- Singapore Reits Strategy 2018 – RHB Invest 2018-01-05: Stay Selective, Focus Shifts to Growth
#7 -- Singapore Banks – RHB Invest 2018-01-05: SIBOR Spikes after Christmas
#7 -- Singapore Telecommunications Sector – RHB Invest 2018-01-10: Brace For Impact
#7 -- Real Estate – RHB Invest 2018-01-12: Brighter Outlook But Watch Out for Pitfalls
#8 -- Singapore Construction Sector – CIMB Research 2018-01-04: Building Hope
#8 -- Singapore Healthcare Sector – CIMB Research 2018-01-07: Checking the Pulse for 2018
#8 -- SG Tech Manufacturing Services Sector – CIMB Research 2018-01-09: Unearthing the Laggards
#8 -- Offshore & Marine Small / Mid-caps - CIMB Research 2018-01-12: See You After 1H2018
#8 -- Singapore Property Development & Inventories - CIMB Research 2018-01-15: Robust Outlook
#8 -- Singapore Property Developers & Inventories - CIMB Research 2018-01-18: Small Is Beautiful II
#10 -- Singapore Stock Alpha Picks – UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-04: Kicking Off in 2018
#10 -- Banking – Singapore – UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-05: Fintech – Enabler or Disruptor?
#10 -- Telecommunications – Singapore - UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-12: The Year of Trepidation
#10 -- Property Sector - Singapore - UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-19: Key Takeaways From The Built Environment & Property Prospects Seminar 2018
#11 -- Singapore Market Focus – DBS Research 2018-01-05: January Awakening
#11 -- Singapore Property Sector - DBS Research 2018-01-15: Firming Fundamentals
#12 -- Singapore Banking Monthly – Phillip Securities 2018-01-10: 2017 Ended with a Strong Performance in December
#15 -- Jan 19, 2018 Broker's Take: UOB bullish on residential, office segments; mixed on industrial
#17 -- Singapore Property - Maybank Kim Eng 2018-01-15: Recovering Housing Market
#18 -- Jan 29, 2018 Hopes up as Singapore earnings season begins
 
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Jupiter2017

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http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/com...ts-in-2018-but-investors-are-skittish-dbs-ceo
Strong fundamentals to support markets in 2018, but investors are skittish: DBS CEO
Thu, Jan 11, 2018 - 2:59 PM Yasmine Yahya yasminey@sph.com.sg

THE FUNDAMENTALS that underlie global economic growth are still strong, which will power financial markets throughout 2018, DBS chief executive Piyush Gupta said on Thursday.
However, with stock markets now in the midst of a nine-year bull run, investors will be skittish and it will not take much to trigger corrections, he added.
He was speaking at the DBS Private Bank market outlook for the first half of the year.
Triggers could come in the form of geopolitical events such as rising tensions in North Korea or a step up in trade rhetoric between the United States and China, Mr Gupta said.
Even likelier are triggers in the form of sociopolitical tensions - political events caused by tensions surfacing from the disenfranchised and underprivileged in society.
"There is a lot of angst in the system and inequity and comparisons between the haves and have-nots will continue creating a lot of angst," he said.
Still, there are pockets of opportunities for investors this year, he said.
He is particularly bullish on China, noting that while tech valuations are high there, the tech firms are making a big difference in the economy and society, which justifies their valuations.
South-east Asia is another positive story this year, he noted, given strong consumption trends and the openness of the regional economies, which will help them ride on strong global growth.
Financial services companies stand to gain from rising interest rates, he said, while in Singapore, property firms are likely to get a boost from the ongoing market recovery.
 

Jupiter2017

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http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/ban...tions-on-outlook-for-singapores-surging-reits
Credit Suisse cautions on outlook for Singapore's surging Reits
Fri, Jan 12, 2018 - 12:59 PM

[SINGAPORE] Credit Suisse Group AG warned that gains for Singapore's real estate investment trusts may be limited this year after a surge in prices in 2017 left valuations looking stretched.
Kum Soek Ching, head of South-east Asia research in the firm's private banking operation, pointed to declines in the extra yield from the securities versus risk-free rates from Singapore government bonds.
For this year, the Reits may return 3.4 percentage points over a 10-year bond, less than the historical average of 3.7 percentage points, Ms Kum wrote in a note.
The Straits Times Real Estate Investment Trust Index gave a 28 per cent total return last year as funds flowed into Singapore and the outlook brightened for property. Though prospects remain good, with rents improving as demand recovers and supply eases, investors may want to wait for more attractive entry levels, the analyst said.
"The prospect of recovering rents and distribution income has been a tailwind for Singapore Reits driving a further re-rating of the sector," said Ms Kum, who's based in the city.
BLOOMBERG
 

Jupiter2017

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http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/com...-telco-sector-to-market-weight-amid-impending
Broker's take: UOB Kay Hian downgrades telco sector to 'market weight' amid impending TPG debut
Fri, Jan 12, 2018 - 10:37 AM Annabeth Leow leowhma@sph.com.sg

UOB Kay Hian has downgraded its take on the telecommunications sector from "overweight" to "market weight", just a day after RHB stuck to its "neutral" stance.
The move comes on the back of a growing crowd in the Singapore telco market - not least the impending debut of TPG Telecom as the fourth mobile network operator here - according to a report out on Friday by analyst Jonathan Koh.
But Singtel and NetLink NBN Trust were Mr Koh's two stock picks, as well as his only "buy" calls in the sector.
"We have turned defensive on the telco sector as our channel checks indicate TPG's network deployment has progressed smoothly and it is on track for the launch of commercial services" by the year's end, Mr Koh wrote.
While the Australian entrant faces what he called "daunting challenges on the ground" as it rolls out its own infrastructure, he noted that TPG has managed to tap NetLink's non-building access points at a regulated price of S$73.80 a month for its backhaul transmission network.
The second-largest fixed broadband player on its home turf, TPG also has healthy earnings, strong cash flow and low gearing, said Mr Koh, calling the telco "able to weather a protracted battle" on arrival.
The UOB Kay Hian analyst also touched on the rise of the mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) model, where companies lease the use of an infrastructure incumbent's network.
Although MVNOs tend to target specific consumer niches, Mr Koh said that the cumulative impact of three new MVNOs "could create some headaches and headwinds for the incumbents".
He was referring to Circles.Life, which has been hosted by M1 since 2016, as well as the newly launched Zero Mobile and the planned expansion of fibre broadband company MyRepublic.
Singtel escaped Mr Koh's sector downgrade, with a "buy" rating and a target price of S$4.53, thanks to the growth of its associates outside Singapore.
With its Singapore mobile business making up just 7 per cent of revenue, Mr Koh said that "Singtel provides a defensive shelter (owing) to its geographical diversification".
He also put a "buy" call on NetLink, with a S$0.93 target price, citing its monopoly on home wholesale fibre connections and its potential to benefit from the upcoming TPG launch.
"Yield-oriented investors should also consider NetLink, which provides a resilient dividend yield of 5.8 per cent," Mr Koh wrote.
As for StarHub and M1, the analyst said that their share prices have come a good way down from a peak in 2015, "which already reflected the expected damage caused by the entry of TPG to some extent".
StarHub's rating was maintained at "hold" on the back of its enterprise business, where it has invested in acquisitions and seen revenue pick up, at a target price of S$2.90.
M1, meanwhile, was downgraded from "buy" to "hold", with a S$1.75 target, because Mr Koh deemed its focus on a mobile business and younger customers "more susceptible to competition from TPG" and lowered its growth assumption.
A catalyst to the sector could come from StarHub and M1 collaborating on network sharing, Mr Koh noted, but there is the risk that they do not close the deal, or that the network sharing does not give the desired cost savings.
The entry of TPG might also worsen competition and price erosion in the telco sector more than expected.
Singtel was flat at S$3.61 as at 10.25am, while StarHub dipped by one Singapore cent to S$2.92 and M1 was down by the same to S$1.78
 

mikezuper

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http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/com...-telco-sector-to-market-weight-amid-impending
Broker's take: UOB Kay Hian downgrades telco sector to 'market weight' amid impending TPG debut
Fri, Jan 12, 2018 - 10:37 AM Annabeth Leow leowhma@sph.com.sg

UOB Kay Hian has downgraded its take on the telecommunications sector from "overweight" to "market weight", just a day after RHB stuck to its "neutral" stance.
The move comes on the back of a growing crowd in the Singapore telco market - not least the impending debut of TPG Telecom as the fourth mobile network operator here - according to a report out on Friday by analyst Jonathan Koh.
But Singtel and NetLink NBN Trust were Mr Koh's two stock picks, as well as his only "buy" calls in the sector.
"We have turned defensive on the telco sector as our channel checks indicate TPG's network deployment has progressed smoothly and it is on track for the launch of commercial services" by the year's end, Mr Koh wrote.
While the Australian entrant faces what he called "daunting challenges on the ground" as it rolls out its own infrastructure, he noted that TPG has managed to tap NetLink's non-building access points at a regulated price of S$73.80 a month for its backhaul transmission network.
The second-largest fixed broadband player on its home turf, TPG also has healthy earnings, strong cash flow and low gearing, said Mr Koh, calling the telco "able to weather a protracted battle" on arrival.
The UOB Kay Hian analyst also touched on the rise of the mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) model, where companies lease the use of an infrastructure incumbent's network.
Although MVNOs tend to target specific consumer niches, Mr Koh said that the cumulative impact of three new MVNOs "could create some headaches and headwinds for the incumbents".
He was referring to Circles.Life, which has been hosted by M1 since 2016, as well as the newly launched Zero Mobile and the planned expansion of fibre broadband company MyRepublic.
Singtel escaped Mr Koh's sector downgrade, with a "buy" rating and a target price of S$4.53, thanks to the growth of its associates outside Singapore.
With its Singapore mobile business making up just 7 per cent of revenue, Mr Koh said that "Singtel provides a defensive shelter (owing) to its geographical diversification".
He also put a "buy" call on NetLink, with a S$0.93 target price, citing its monopoly on home wholesale fibre connections and its potential to benefit from the upcoming TPG launch.
"Yield-oriented investors should also consider NetLink, which provides a resilient dividend yield of 5.8 per cent," Mr Koh wrote.
As for StarHub and M1, the analyst said that their share prices have come a good way down from a peak in 2015, "which already reflected the expected damage caused by the entry of TPG to some extent".
StarHub's rating was maintained at "hold" on the back of its enterprise business, where it has invested in acquisitions and seen revenue pick up, at a target price of S$2.90.
M1, meanwhile, was downgraded from "buy" to "hold", with a S$1.75 target, because Mr Koh deemed its focus on a mobile business and younger customers "more susceptible to competition from TPG" and lowered its growth assumption.
A catalyst to the sector could come from StarHub and M1 collaborating on network sharing, Mr Koh noted, but there is the risk that they do not close the deal, or that the network sharing does not give the desired cost savings.
The entry of TPG might also worsen competition and price erosion in the telco sector more than expected.
Singtel was flat at S$3.61 as at 10.25am, while StarHub dipped by one Singapore cent to S$2.92 and M1 was down by the same to S$1.78
How can I short telco? :s34:
 

Jupiter2017

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RHB Invest

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/consumer-sector-rhb-invest-2018-01-04.html
Consumer Sector – RHB Invest 2018-01-04: This Year, We spend

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/reits-strategy-2018-rhb-invest-2018-01-05.html
Singapore Reits Strategy 2018 – RHB Invest 2018-01-05: Stay Selective, Focus Shifts to Growth

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/singapore-banks-dbs-ocbc-uob-rhb-invest-2018-01-05.html
Singapore Banks – RHB Invest 2018-01-05: SIBOR Spikes after Christmas

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...m1-singtel-starhub-rhb-invest-2018-01-10.html
Singapore Telecommunications Sector – RHB Invest 2018-01-10: Brace For Impact

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...r-singapore-stocks-rhb-invest-2018-01-12.html
Real Estate – RHB Invest 2018-01-12: Brighter Outlook But Watch Out for Pitfalls
 
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Jupiter2017

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CIMB Research

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...n-sector-stocks-cimb-research-2018-01-04.html
Singapore Construction Sector – CIMB Research 2018-01-04: Building Hope

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/singapore-healthcare-sector-cimb-research-2018-01-07.html
Singapore Healthcare Sector – CIMB Research 2018-01-07: Checking the Pulse for 2018

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...services-stocks-cimb-research-2018-01-09.html
SG Tech Manufacturing Services Sector – CIMB Research 2018-01-09: Unearthing the Laggards

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...mid-caps-stocks-cimb-research-2018-01-12.html
Offshore & Marine Small / Mid-caps - CIMB Research 2018-01-12: See You After 1H2018

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...ers-inventories-cimb-research-2018-01-15.html
Singapore Property Development & Inventories - CIMB Research 2018-01-15: Robust Outlook

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...-and-invetories-cimb-research-2018-01-18.html
Singapore Property Developers & Inventories - CIMB Research 2018-01-18: Small Is Beautiful II
 
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zuoom

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How would this translate to the everyday Joe and Jane?
 

Jupiter2017

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UOB Kay Hian

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/singapore-stock-alpha-picks-2018-uob-kay-hian-2018-01-04.html
Singapore Stock Alpha Picks – UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-04: Kicking Off in 2018

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/singapore-banking-dbs-ocbc-uob-kay-hian-2018-01-05.html
Banking – Singapore – UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-05: Fintech – Enabler or Disruptor?

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...-starhub-netlink-uob-kay-hian-2018-01-12.html
Telecommunications – Singapore - UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-12: The Year of Trepidation

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018...y-sector-outlook-uob-kay-hian-2018-01-19.html
Property Sector - Singapore - UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-19: Key Takeaways From The Built Environment & Property Prospects Seminar 2018
 
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Jupiter2017

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How would this translate to the everyday Joe and Jane?

For people who are investing in the stock market, reading all these articles can help to provide some ideas regarding what to invest, what to avoid, when to cut loss, etc, etc. It is up to the individual to read.
 

Jupiter2017

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http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/com...sidential-office-segments-mixed-on-industrial
Broker's Take: UOB bullish on residential, office segments; mixed on industrial
Fri, Jan 19, 2018 - 11:37 AM Navin Sregantan navinsre@sph.com.sg

ANALYSTS at UOB Kay Hian have maintained that the property sector in Singapore is overweight. But they were bullish on the outlook for the residential and office segments, despite a mixed outlook on the industrial segment.
They noted the strong pick-up in sales momentum and pricing in the residential sector in 2017. This was led by the luxury segment (transactions above S$3,000 per square feet), which first showed signs of recovery in early 2016.
The residential recovery was also driven by "pent-up" demand arising from the implementation of the Total Debt Servicing Ratio in 2013, they added.
The effect of interest rate hikes subduing the property recovery is likely to be overblown. "Mortgagors can easily switch over from floating to fixed rate schemes which have been benign," they said.
Strong performance of technology, real estate, and co-working buoyed the office segment in 2017, despite a record new supply and increases in shadow spaces. "At the current pace of expansion, these players may extend their presence to outside of CBD area," UOB added.
Their sentiments on the industrial sector remain mixed.
Led by the recovery in electronics, the sector saw an increase in demand but there was still an increasing supply of spaces, leading to declining rates of occupany, they said.
However, UOB noted there was an increasing demand for rental spaces in business parks as some firms have relocated their back-end operations to such parks, amid increases in office rentals.
The brokers indicated a preference for stocks with exposure to the residential, hotel and office segments, with their top picks being City Developments, Wing Tai, CDL Hospitality Trusts, CapitaLand Commercial Trust and Ascendas Reit.
 

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Yet cct big ls this week

Sent from Samsung SM-N950F using GAGT
 

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http://www.straitstimes.com/business/companies-markets/hopes-up-as-singapore-earnings-season-begins
Mon, Jan 29, 2018 Annabeth Leow leowhma@sph.com.sg
Hopes up as Singapore earnings season begins

SINGAPORE (THE BUSINESS TIMES) - UST as traders toasted the gains of 2017 a month back, the market could be looking at another annus mirabilis this year.
Earnings season is upon us, which often offers watchers a referendum on the health of a stock.
And if the news is especially rosy, company financials could be a shot in the arm for the local bourse.
The benchmark Straits Times Index has largely been coasting along at decade-high levels for a week now.
Eli Lee, head of strategy for the Bank of Singapore, told The Business Times: "Notwithstanding an 18 per cent rally last year, valuations in the Singapore equities market remain undemanding.
"We anticipate gains from Singapore equities again this year as the economy benefits from an ongoing synchronised pick-up in global growth, and financial conditions continue to stay fairly accommodative."

Many happy Reit-urns
Even as most of the blue-chips on the index will share earnings only from early February onwards, various real estate investment trusts (Reits) have already been setting the pace.
CapitaLand Mall Trust, CapitaLand Commercial Trust and Ascendas Reit last week joined a slew of non-index fellows - from Cache Logistics Trust to Frasers Centrepoint Trust - in dropping results announcements.
Now, folks may disagree on whether, say, the industrial segment or the commercial space is looking more favourable.
Office rents will rise, but by how much? What will the tailwinds be from the manufacturing boom's hunger for high-tech buildings?
But these questions might well be less existential angst than fun brain teasers for a boom time.
And despite various Reits clocking distributions per unit (DPUs) that are only modestly higher than the previous year's - if not flattish or in decline - sector analysts retain high hopes.
RHB Research Institute, for instance, reiterated an "overweight" stance on Reits on Jan 24.
Vijay Natarajan, the team's property and Reits analyst, separately told BT in an e-mail: "Taking advantage of low interest rates and buoyant Reit market, many of the Reits have done yield accretive acquisitions last year. So the contributions will slowly start kicking in as (the) year progresses.
"The growth in the economy should also filter into industrial and hospitality rents, in the form of higher rents, which are coming off from a low base. This should support DPU, although I believe this will take one or two more quarters."
And the biblical predicament of "no room at the inn" may in fact be cause for cheer in the hospitality segment this year, even as Singapore's chairmanship of Asean is expected to lift visitor numbers.
"For the first time in the last four years, hoteliers are saying, 'Yes, we can raise the room rates,'" said Mr Natarajan.
Vincent Yeo, chief executive of CDL Hospitality Trusts' managers, told a briefing on Jan 26 that the industry expectation is for 2 per cent to 5 per cent growth in revenue per available room (RevPAR) in 2018.
Meanwhile, in a sector update on Jan 24, UOB Kay Hian analysts Vikrant Pandey and Loke Peihao noted that Keppel Reit's performance was below consensus expectations. Yet they went ahead, and stuck anyway to an "overweight" call on the sector.
As the Republic's general economy is thriving for now, Mr Pandey and Mr Loke noted that there is both a positive outlook for the office market - where new supply is tapering off in the mid-term - as well as the expectation of a recovery in retail rents.
Speaking to BT over the phone, Mr Loke added: "Generally, we're quite positive on the hotel segment because of the tight supply."
But the sustained optimism among Reit observers may not extend to local mall portfolios.
Maybank Kim Eng analyst Chua Su Tye wrote in a report on Jan 25: "We are negative on retail S-Reits, given structural challenges from e-commerce disruption and sales leakage."
RHB's Mr Natarajan called the retail segment the "wild card" in the Reit sector, saying: "Unlike other sectors where the supply is declining, the retail supply is still steady."
Other bogeymen are also hiding under the bed. Some Reit managers are shifting away from floating interest rates on their debt, and towards fixed rates instead.
"The real bad omen for Reits to watch out (for) is an unexpected sharp spike in interest rates, and wane in market demand for yield and safe-haven instruments," said Mr Natarajan.

Oil's well for all
Banks are frolicking on loan growth and higher interest rates. Industrial manufacturers are cashing in on gains from the global tech supply chain. And a property bonanza has swept the island by storm.
KGI Securities research analyst Joel Ng told BT that equity markets have had a "surprisingly strong" start to 2018 so far.
The oil and gas sector has also bounced back, to brokers' delight.
"As oil majors continue to adapt to the oil price environment and are better positioned to make investment decisions, order wins will return to the sector, but mainly in the non-drilling segment initially," said Mr Lee, from the Bank of Singapore.
Mr Ng said: "We are most bullish on oil and gas companies and believe that we are at the beginning of a multi-year bull run in this sector...
"We believe the massive under-investment in this sector is setting up the stage for a supply-demand mismatch in the next one to two years."
Lim Siew Khee, head of Singapore research at CIMB Research, noted that oil and gas bubbliness will spill over into the capital goods sector, too.
"We like the yards and expect stronger orders to come in," she said.
But sectors that might struggle include telecoms and transport.
The DBS Group Research team wrote gloomily, in a telco industry report on Jan 25: "The incumbents' complacency in embracing digitisation and failure to invest in digital channels to improve distributions, customer interactions and customer care could heavily weigh on future growth and subscriber additions."
KGI's Mr Ng singled out taxi operator ComfortDelGro as another potential victim of technological disruption and hot competition.
He summed up the state of affairs in an e-mail thus: "On the broader market, we remain optimistic going into 2018, but do not expect the same levels of gains that we experienced in 2017.
"Singapore's equity market is expected to benefit from positive global economic growth amid a minimal inflationary environment (which is great for corporate profits!)."
 

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Analysts welcome market correction; fundamentals, bull run still intact

http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/sto...correction-fundamentals-bull-run-still-intact
Analysts welcome market correction; fundamentals, bull run still intact
They say global panic prompted recent 'healthy' pullback, and prices may be range-bound for now
Tue, Feb 06, 2018 - 5:50 AM Annabeth Leow leowhma@sph.com.sg

Singapore
DESPITE the recent bloodbath in the Asian bourses, it is not yet the end of the world, market watchers have said.
Singapore's Straits Times Index (STI) shed 46.89 points, or 1.33 per cent, to finish down on Monday - alongside bourses in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Seoul - after higher United States Treasury yields fuelled panic selling on Wall Street last week.
Hartmut Issel, head of Asia-Pacific equity and credit in UBS Wealth Management, said on Monday afternoon: "The market weakness today is not confined to Singapore, which in any case is not the most affected index."
Yet even as the STI continued to retreat from decade highs after having closed above 3,600 on Jan 24, the research team at KGI Securities (Singapore) still put out an update on Monday, exhorting traders to "buy the dip on market over-reaction".
The index is likely headed for "a mild correction" of 5 per cent to 10 per cent, KGI retail research manager Joel Ng told The Business Times over the phone. But he maintained that "nothing has changed on a fundamental basis", adding that regional markets are still up so far for the year, "so a healthy correction is good".
Eli Lee, head of strategy at the Bank of Singapore, also described the market consolidation as "healthy".
"History shows that short-term corrections are common - even in bull markets - and these are usually short-lived and take an average of less than six months to recover," he said.
Phillip Securities Research investment analyst Jeremy Ng said the sell-off had been imminent.
While adding that "the market needed to catch a breather and rebalance", he stuck to the bullish call on the stock market that he had issued at the start of the year. Like Mr Lee, he predicted that the local index correction would be short-lived.
Still, Mr Ng cautioned that, from a price action perspective, more dip buying is likely to reappear around the STI's 60-day moving average of 3,469 points.
The team at DBS Group Research has pointed to near-term support in the range of 3,450 to 3,480 points, while IG Asia market strategist Pan Jingyi pegged the STI's immediate support level at 3,470, ahead of uptrend support at around 3,430.
"While the pullback had been deep this round, (with) the likes of the local STI being dragged past a key support level, I maintain the view from this morning that we are not at an inflection point for prices yet," she said in an afternoon e-mail to BT.
Although Phillip Securities' research head Paul Chew told BT that it is hard to pinpoint the exact timeline of a recovery, he added that the market is set up to trade range-bound for now, as any macro-economic news will be scrutinised for its potential effect on a US Federal Reserve rate hike.
KGI's Mr Ng also pointed out: "We're still in earnings season, and valuations are what drive stocks."
Singapore traders can look forward to results from blue chips such as DBS and Singtel; both STI constituents are due to report ahead of the market's open on Thursday.
CMC Markets Singapore analyst Margaret Yang wrote in a morning note that a sell-off in Singapore and Hong Kong would likely be due in part to profit-taking, ahead of the earnings season's peak.
"The downside is cushioned by improved fundamental elements and relatively low valuation, therefore value investors should have confidence about the market outlook beyond this correction," she said.
And analysts were adamant that, when it comes to markets' bull run, the fat lady has not yet sung.
UBS' Mr Issel noted in his e-mail to BT that "the sharp market move should be put in context", given factors such as markets' "exceptional" performance of late.
"US monetary policy is in the process of normalising after a period of unusually ultra-easy monetary policy and record-low bond yields. Investors should expect volatility to return to normal too," he said.
"With this in mind, we don't believe that now is a time to reduce exposure to stocks. Global growth and earnings remain strong, with the recent tax cuts providing a boost to growth."
Marie Owens Thomsen, chief economist at Indosuez Wealth Management, told BT: "We are probably seeing mostly profit-taking at this stage, consistent with recent high readings of bullish sentiment in the markets."
She added that Asian economies have become more resilient to external shocks. "A sharply higher oil price could make vulnerabilities emerge again, but there is a lower risk of balance-of-payments crises in the region today than previously."
Bull markets tend to end when the growth cycle turns negative or there is excessive policy tightening, said Binay Chandgothia, Hong Kong-based managing director and portfolio manager of Principal Global Investors' asset allocation arm. "Neither sign is visible" at the moment, he added.
All the same, there may still be headwinds in store.
Every word from the lips of new Fed chairman Jerome Powell "will be critical in the near term", said Phillip's Mr Chew - as investors wait to see if he is a hawk pushing to tighten the screws on monetary policy.
Bank of Singapore's Mr Lee said: "Investors can expect increased market volatility as key risks remain in the backdrop. In our view, the market is under-pricing inflation."
 

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http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/stocks/dow-plunge-how-is-it-affecting-the-singapore-stock-market
Dow plunge: How is it affecting the Singapore stock market?
Tue, Feb 06, 2018 - 12:29 PM Annabeth Leow leowhma@sph.com.sg

THE global stock rout led by the worst point plunge ever in the US Dow benchmark continued apace on Tuesday, with Singapore's Straits Times Index (STI) down by 121.67 points, or 3.5 per cent, as at 11.25am.
Global bourses are seeing their biggest sell-off since 2016. Wall Street indexes plunged overnight, with traders in Asia waking up to find the Dow sank over a thousand points or 4.6 per cent.

Q: Why has there been a selling frenzy in the US?
A: Last Friday's weak performance came on the back of steady US job numbers for the month of January.
You might think that good news would fuel traders' optimism.
But investors feared instead that higher wages would drive inflation upwards - which might lead the Federal Reserve, or the US central bank, to raise interest rates faster and more often than expected.
So they started dumping their stocks last week - and continued when the markets reopened on Monday.
Mr Oriano Lizza, a Singapore-based sales trader at CMC Markets, said: "The magnitude of the drop can be quantified as all of 2018's gains were erased." And the market losses have been engulfed in a vicious circle of sorts, with Mr Lizza writing that the recent downtrend "has put panic into investors".
"This may be the start of further declines in the coming days," he said.
Another issue could be the rise of automated, algorithmic trading and robo-advisors. Computer-driven trading is likely amplifying the rout as index levels, particularly that for market volatility, are breached.
American financial magazine Barron's noted that "machines likely made the highs and lows more dramatic".

Q: What was happening in the Singapore market before the latest drop?

A: Traders pushed the benchmark Straits Times Index (STI) to 10-year highs in mid-January.
Caution then led them to beat a retreat after the index crossed the 3,600-point mark at the close on Jan 24 - around the time that the latest earnings season kicked off.
This is when companies post their quarterly financial result, which is viewed as a report card on how business is faring.
But the Singapore sell-off accelerated markedly when trading picked up this week.
The movement came partly in response to the drop in the United States stock market on Feb 2, ahead of the weekend break.

Q: How have other Asian markets been doing?
Some are faring worse. The STI fell by 1.33 per cent on Monday, which was worse than the Hang Seng's 1.09 per cent drop in Hong Kong but not as bad as the 2.55 per cent decline in Tokyo's Nikkei.
Mainland China was propped up on Monday by signs of strong growth in the services sector, but no major data releases are scheduled for Asia on Tuesday.
After the Tuesday open, Sydney was down by 2.58 per cent, Hong Kong by 3.77 per cent and Tokyo by 5.17 per cent.
China's blue-chip CSI300 index and its Shanghai Composite Index were both also lower in morning trading.

Q: Is it time to panic? How long will this sell-off last?
The consensus among analysts still seems to be that the world's plummeting indexes are "healthy" corrections after a long stock-market rally.
Mr Rob Carnell, ING's Singapore-based chief economist and head of research for the Asia-Pacific region, said: "There has been nothing substantial overnight to propel further losses, merely the sell-off of the previous day gathering momentum." Mr Samuel Siew, an analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore, remarked: "We feel that this may just be a correction as fundamentals are still showing a... positive US economy. The sell-off due to investor sentiments is likely temporal." And, since earnings season is still under way worldwide, some market watchers feel that strong financial results could offer support to the markets.
Deutsche Bank Wealth Management's US investment strategists Larry Adam, Matt Barry and Moshe Levin wrote in a memo that "the positive underlying backdrop of improving economic growth and earnings should remain supportive of global equities".
But AxiTrader chief market strategist Greg McKenna, who is based in Australia, was more circumspect about the doom and gloom."We don't need to listen to the pundits - me included - we need to see what the retail investors who have such a part of this latest surge in stocks do," he wrote on his blog.
He added, with an ominous touch, that a drop of 3 per cent to 5 per cent "can easily morph into something more pernicious".
 
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