Singapore Stock Picks 2018 by Analysts

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Singapore Stock Picks 2018 by Analysts
This thread for posting Singapore Stock Picks provided by Analysts at the begining of 2018, and for forum discussions. For on-going updates in 2018, refer to the thread link:
http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/s...y-outlook-2018-%96-going-updates-5757213.html
***** Not a call to buy or sell. Dyodd (do your own due diligence) *****

Note: first 10 posting slots of this thread are reserved for Stock Picks updates from Analysts.

http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/singapore-stocks-to-buy-in-2018-brokers-consesus.html
Singapore Stocks to Buy in 2018 ~ Brokers' Consensus
Stocks recommended by 3 or more brokers: Venture Corp, Ascendas REIT, UOL Group, Capitaland Limited, City Developments, Singtel & Keppel Corp.
Read on ….


http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/2017-sgx-top-50-share-price-gainers.html
2017 SGX Top 50 Share Price Gainers
Read on ….
 
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Stock Picks updates - UOB Kay Hian

Singapore Stocks Alpha Picks - UOB Kay Hian 2017-12-06: Conviction Picks To End The Year 2017
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017/12/singapore-stock-alpha-picks-uob-kay-hian-2017-12-06.html
CDL, CDL HTrust, Citic Environtech, GL, SATS, Singtel, Thai Bev, Wing Tai

Singapore REITs - UOB Kay Hian 2017-12-15: Hospitality to Shine in 2018
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...eit-outlook-2018-uob-kay-hian-2017-12-15.html
(Read for more picks)

Singapore Stocks Alpha Picks - UOB Kay Hian 2018-01-04: Kicking Off in 2018
http://research.sginvestors.io/2018/01/singapore-stock-alpha-picks-2018-uob-kay-hian-2018-01-04.html
CDL, CDL HTrust, Citic Environtech, GL, Keppel Corp, SIA, Singtel, Thai Bev, Wing Tai
 
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Stock Picks updates - DBS Research

Singapore Strategy – DBS Research 2017-11-27: 2018 Top 15 Stock Picks
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...15-stock-picks-1-dbs-research-2017-11-27.html
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...15-stock-picks-2-dbs-research-2017-11-27.html
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...15-stock-picks-3-dbs-research-2017-11-27.html

CDL, Genting, OCBC Bank, Sembcorp Marine, Singtel
Thai Bev, UOB Bank, UOL, Venture, APAC Realty
BreadTalk, CDL HTrust, China Aviation Oil, CityNeon, Hi-P


Singapore Small Mid Cap Stocks Strategy – DBS Research 2017-12-05: Property-driven Recovery Plays
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...-stocks-strategy-dbs-research-2017-12-05.html
Singapore Small Mid Cap Stocks Strategy – DBS Research 2017-12-05: More room to grow for second-liner property stocks and construction-related plays
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...ions-stock-picks-dbs-research-2017-12-05.html

Chip Eng Seng, APAC Realty
Hong Fok, Hock Lian Seng, Lian Beng, Tiong Seng, Keong Hong
 
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Stock Picks updates - CIMB Research

Singapore Strategy – CIMB Research 2017-11-16: 3Q17 More Misses; 2018 Sneak Peek ~ All Is Well
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017/11/singapore-strategy-cimb-research-2017-11-16.html
1H2018:
Large Cap: Genting, Keppel Corp, Sembcorp Marine, UOL, Venture
Small Cap: AEM, Memtech, mm2, Sunningdale, Yongnam

Navigating Singapore > Property Overall – CIMB Research 2017-12-13: Stay In The Game
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...y-outlook-2018l-cimb-research-2017-12-13.html

Navigating Singapore > S-REITs – 2018 CIMB Research 2017-12-14: Resume Running On Twin Legs
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...ts-2018-outlook-cimb-research-2017-12-14.html
 
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Stock Picks updates - Phillip Securities Research

Phillip 2018 Singapore Strategy - Phillip Securities 2017-12-18: From liquidity to a business cycle, The Phillip Absolute 10
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...bsolute-10-phillip-securities-2017-12-18.html

a) Yield : Asian Pay TV Trust, Ascendas REIT
b) Growth : Chip Eng Seng, Dairy Farm, DBS Group, Geo Energy, Micro-Mechanics
c) re-rating: Banyan Tree, CapitaLand, ComfortDelGro
 
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Stock Picks updates – RHB Invest

Singapore Strategy & Top Picks 2018 – RHB Invest 2017-12-19: There Is Still Potential To Generate Alpha
http://research.sginvestors.io/2017...egy-top-picks-2018-rhb-invest-2017-12-19.html
APAC Realty, Dairy Farm, Food Empire, UOB, Venture
REITs: Ascendas Reit, OUE Hospitality Trust, Manulife US Reit
Small & Mid Cap: Avi-Tech Electronics, HRnetGroup, Moya Holdings, Singapore Medical Group

5 REITs to benefit from the economic growth cycle in 2018: RHB
https://www.theedgesingapore.com/5-reits-benefit-economic-growth-cycle-2018-rhb
published 19/12/2017
 
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http://www.straitstimes.com/business/invest/stay-in-game-but-diversify-across-asset-classes
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Sunday Times on December 31, 2017, with the headline 'Stay in game but diversify across asset classes'.
Lorna Tan Invest Editor/Senior Correspondent

Shares performed well this year - in Singapore and abroad - while the wave of collective sales took everyone by surprise. It could mean more of the same for 2018 given the level of optimism generated. But as five financial experts tell Invest editor Lorna Tan, risks lie ahead despite a stellar 2017 for investors.

2017 yearender: Hou Wey Fook: Chief investment officer, DBS Bank
Stay in game but diversify across asset classes

Mr Hou Wey Fook of DBS says it is essential that investors diversify across a number of asset classes, including bonds, stocks and cash, and adopt a long-term approach.

Q WHAT WERE THE BEST AND WORST THINGS (FINANCIALLY) THAT HAPPENED TO YOU THIS YEAR?
A The best thing that happened: I stayed invested in the stock market, primarily through holdings in Singapore real estate investment trusts (Reits).
The total return from this sector - comprising commercial office, retail, and hospitality Reits - was around 20 per cent this year. I bought them at the start of the year on the basis that they would provide me with dividends of some 6 per cent annually, far higher than what I would have obtained from fixed deposits. But the icing on the cake was that these counters also generated capital gains.
The worst thing, from an investment perspective, was that I did not participate sufficiently in Asian technology counters, such as Alibaba Group Holding and Tencent Holdings, which doubled in value.
Of course, hindsight is always 20/20, so I should not be too hard on myself as my objective at the start of the year was really to achieve cash-flow returns.

Q HOW HAS 2017 BEEN FOR THE MARKETS?
A The year is almost over, but the much-anticipated "topping out" of the eight-year-old United States equity bull market did not materialise after all.
The excesses seen during the global financial crisis in 2008/ 2009 have undergone structural unwinding, while the synchronised global growth story has unfolded, buoyed by the recovery in corporate capital expenditure, exports, and domestic consumption.
This positive macro environment has put global corporate earnings on a healthy trajectory. All told, global stocks went up 20 per cent this year - this time led by Asia, which climbed 40 per cent.

Q HOW DO YOU SEE 2018 PANNING OUT?
A We believe the bull market that started nine years ago in the US remains intact. In fact, Asian markets have only started to catch on to this bullish trend.
Asian stock indexes were unchanged for the period between 2007 and 2016. We have been telling our clients to "stay in the game" or to stay invested, as the fundamental story of synchronous global growth and low inflation will trump concerns of high market valuations.

Q GOING INTO 2018, PLEASE OFFER SOME TIPS TO RETAIL INVESTORS.
A While there is some concern about the spectre of rising US Treasury yields on the back of the Federal Reserve's guidance to raise rates - since these have often been associated with weaker equity prices - historical data shows that this need not necessarily be the case.
Indeed, the S&P 500 Index has rallied in tandem with rising rates in the past (for instance, 2003-2006). We think this rate-hiking cycle will be no different. We expect the uptrend in risk assets to stay on track, as long as the Fed maintains a gradual approach to policy tightening.
We continue to like the dividend investment theme and the infrastructure theme in Asia, on the back of China's Belt and Road Initiative.
Globally, we like the sectors of financials, due to rising rates, and technology, given its enormous potential in the long run. With the growing dominance of robotics, artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things, traditional business models are on the cusp of major disruption - paving the way for a structural uptrend in technology stocks.
It is essential that investors diversify across a number of asset classes, including bonds, stocks and cash. They should adopt a long-term horizon in their investment approach, as it has clearly been proven that "timing the market" is extremely difficult when it comes to generating long-term and sustainable returns.


Others:
http://www.straitstimes.com/business/dont-buy-into-fads-or-a-slick-sales-pitch
Luke Lim: Managing director, PhillipCapital
Don't buy into fads or a slick sales pitch

http://www.straitstimes.com/business/invest/high-end-homes-poised-for-a-rebound
2017 yearender: Tang Wei Leng: Managing director, Colliers International
High-end homes poised for a rebound

http://www.straitstimes.com/business/invest/be-prepared-for-potential-turbulence
Joseph Kwok: President, Financial Planning Association of Singapore
Be prepared for potential turbulence

http://www.straitstimes.com/business/invest/sit-with-a-planner-to-safeguard-future
Patrick Teow: President, Life Insurance Association
Sit with a planner to safeguard future
 
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http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news...singapore-stocks-to-go-higher-in-2018-9501814
By Tang See Kit @SeeKitCNA 18 Dec 2017 06:48AM (Updated: 18 Dec 2017 12:11PM)
'Stars are aligned' for Singapore stocks to go higher in 2018: Analysts
Local developers and banks remain the top picks for the new year.

SINGAPORE: The likes of banking heavyweights, developers and property trusts will continue to lead the charge next year for Singapore’s stock market, which could see gains of as much as 11 per cent, according to market analysts.
Year to date, the Straits Times Index (STI) has raked in handsome gains of about 20 per cent – a better-than-expected performance that has breezed past analyst estimates, thanks to an outperformance in property and bank stocks amid an economic recovery.
For 2018, the benchmark index remains poised to head higher.
DBS Group Research, for example, has a target of 3,688 points for end-2018, but does “not rule out a re-rating catalyst pushing up STI’s target valuation to 3,800”.
That would give the STI an upside of between 7 to 11 per cent from Friday's (Dec 15) closing level of 3,416.94.
Apart from a continued recovery in corporate earnings, analysts noted that a stable currency leaning on the upside amid expectations of monetary policy tightening will be an “added ingredient” for local equities to outperform.
The “stars are aligned” in the Singapore market, which offers the lowest valuation, highest dividend yield and decent earnings growth compared to its Southeast Asian peers, DBS analysts added.
UOB Kay Hian agreed that corporate earnings could continue rising in 2018 which would support the local bourse.
The research house sees the STI touching 3,530 points by the end of next year though "this could stretch to 3,730 if earnings surprised on the upside".
Head of OCBC Investment Research Carmen Lee similarly expects the STI to head north though the rise may be tempered following a boisterous year.
“We see further upside ahead but not in the same quantum as 2017. After a high base, it’s almost impossible for the market to see two consecutive years of strong growth,” she said, adding that the STI is set for gains of between 8 to 10 per cent.

WHERE TO PLACE YOUR BETS
Local developers, which have been among the brightest spot in Singapore equities this year, remain analysts’ favourites.
Maybank Kim Eng analyst Neel Sinha noted “progressively improving” fundamentals in the domestic property market, with the easing of property cooling measures in March as a factor.
Then, the Government, in an unexpected move, relaxed some residential property measures relating to the seller’s stamp duty as well as the total debt servicing ratio framework.
Meanwhile, the revival of the en bloc market has put more vigour into the markets, helping developers such as blue chip UOL Group and City Developments to surge 39 and 47 per cent, respectively, since the start of the year.
These catalysts are likely to continue into 2018, suggesting that the market rally still has legs to go the distance.
“In Singapore, we continue to have a bias for the property sector," OCBC Investment Research said in a note. "While most of our 2017 property stock picks have performed well this year, we are retaining our buy rating and our top picks include CapitaLand, City Developments, UOL, Wheelock and Wing Tai.”
Banks are also likely to extend their strong run into 2018.
Positive factors include an improvement in net interest margins on the back of a sustained rise in the Singapore interbank offered rate or SIBOR, as well as a recovery in loan growth amid positive macro indicators, according to DBS analysts.
Meanwhile, “the worst is over” for the banks’ exposure to the oil and gas sector, while other business units, such as fee income from wealth, credit cards and investment banking, will continue to drive earnings, noted OCBC’s Ms Lee.
Beyond these, analysts have also given an early thumbs-up to selected real estate investment trusts (REITs), such as Frasers Centrepoint Trust, and oil-related names like Keppel Corp. For the latter, oil prices are likely to hover at current levels and most of the negatives have already been priced in, analysts said.
On the other hand, transport stocks and defensive plays, like telecommunication firms, will likely continue to underperform.
“The factors supporting the banking and property sectors remain in place for 2018, and they will help to lead the index higher,” said IG’s market strategist Pan Jingyi. “That aside, there could be volatility coming through for the market and it might take awhile for the market to reach expected levels of around 3,600 to 3,700.”
This could come in the form of policy tightening by central banks around the world and a growth slowdown in China’s massive economy, Ms Pan said.
Other downside risks include headwinds to external growth and trade that might derail industrial production and potential measures to cool the property market in Singapore amid rebounding physical prices and a collective sale fever, noted Mr Sinha.

EXPECT HEALTHY IPO PIPELINE NEXT YEAR
In line with the buoyant market activity, initial public offerings (IPOs) for the first 11 months of the year raised S$4.6 billion, double the amount of money for the whole of 2016, according to figures from the Singapore Exchange.
An improving economic landscape underpinned the healthy growth in IPOs, said CMC Markets analyst Margaret Yang.
“Market sentiment has been quite good this year so companies are more willing to list in a good year for better valuation and more interest from the market.”
And the local bourse is expected to see another healthy year of listings in 2018, with REITs, consumer and some technology-based businesses from Singapore and overseas as potential candidates
“Many analysts and research houses are revising up their global growth outlook for next year so the outlook remains positive,” Ms Yang said. “Unless there's a systemic market risk event, I would expect the IPO pipeline to remain healthy next year.”
EY’s Asean and Singapore managing partner Max Loh noted that homegrown firm NetLink NBN Trust's US$1.7 billion IPO in July underscored SGX’s “attractiveness and capacity to achieve successful IPOs”.
Apart from Internet-based businesses looking to follow the footsteps of local e-commerce retailer and distributor Y Ventures Group, the Singapore market could be in for a growing number of listings by financial technology businesses supplementing a strong historical pipeline of companies from the property, consumer and industrial sectors, Mr Loh said in a report.
 
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http://www.straitstimes.com/business/invest/looking-the-bull-market-in-the-mouth
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Sunday Times on November 19, 2017, with the headline 'Looking the bull market in the mouth'

Looking the bull market in the mouth
Goh Eng Yeow Senior Correspondent
Far from nearing its end, bull run may have just begun, if 10-year timeframe is considered

A year is a very long time in the stock market, as many investors know all too well, given what was happening around this time last year.
Anyone in or around markets across the globe had one thing on their minds: how to adjust to real estate tycoon turned reality TV star Donald Trump's unexpected victory in the United States presidential election.
Despite an initial knee-jerk sell-down, stock markets around the globe went on to put up an impressive performance on hopes that the populist policies he championed would stimulate economic growth in the US and have a positive spillover effect on the rest of the world.
Even so, it would be difficult to find any market strategist anticipating the Trump victory to provide anything other than a short-term fillip for the stock market.
As former DBS Bank chief investment officer Lim Say Boon noted after stock prices had risen for two weeks following the election, the "Trump trades" seemed to be overdone, given the likelihood of a US interest rate hike, tepid job numbers and a sluggish economic outlook.
He was not the only doubter. Last December, few research houses were tipping shares to enjoy further upside in a big way.
Even bullish ones such as CIMB Research were expecting the benchmark Straits Times Index (STI) to enjoy a 7 per cent gain to 3,140, while more conservative ones like UOB Kay Hian noted that the STI appeared to be "marginally over-valued, trading at 2016's price-earnings of 16.7 times".
What actually panned out has been one of STI's best performances in recent years, with the market barometer making an astonishing gain of almost 20 per cent in the past 12 months - a feat few investors could have imagined possible even a few months ago.
As the market enters the final trading phase of the year, what does the future hold for stock prices?
Not surprisingly, research houses have been falling over themselves anticipating further gains for the share market.
UOB Kay Hian, for example, noted that corporate earnings have turned around this year and could be expected to continue rising next year. It has a 2018 year-end target of 3,530 points for the STI, but "this could stretch to 3,730 if earnings surprised on the upside".
This would give the STI an upside of as much as 11 per cent from its current level of around 3,352.
The research house is expecting corporate earnings per share to grow by 6.4 per cent next year, boosted by an improved showing from sectors such as banks, telecommunications, manufacturing and shipyards.
Like many other market pundits, I have been sceptical about the market's ability to rally further.
Indeed, one of the things I have found myself doing in the past few months is trying to make a case against the ongoing bull market.
And there have been some worrying trends worth highlighting, like the low market volatility, which suggests that investors are too complacent about the risks they are taking as they pour money at this late stage into the surging bourse.
Yet while it may be easy for us to conclude that we are reaching the top of the bull market, you could also argue that the decade-long bear market we have been enduring is only now coming to an end.
Why do I say that? Even with the upswing in stock prices, major regional indexes such as the STI and Hang Seng are only just clawing their way back to the highs reached a decade ago.
Take the STI in December 1999, when the world was intoxicated with the dot.com craze. It reached a then record high of 2,582.94 on Jan 3, 2000.
That record stood for nearly six years as the local market was spooked by the dot.com bust and the Sars crisis.
It started to pick up again in April 2006, and there was no looking back as the STI whizzed past the 3,000-point level the following January and hit a record high of 3,875 in October 2007, before the sub-prime crisis in the US sparked a terrifying financial firestorm that triggered a series of bank failures across the globe.
So, measured over a 10-year timeframe, you can just as convincingly argue that far from nearing its end, the bull market has only just started, if we measure it from when it starts to overtake the previous record high.
Not only that. The global economy is on a tear, experiencing growth at a rate not seen in over a decade. This is likely to boost Singapore's growth closer to 3 per cent for this year.
This explains why instead of looking at the glass half-empty, it may be worthwhile examining why it might actually be half-full. Stocks rarely languish in a bear hug when the economic outlook is rosy.
What is also interesting to note is the various arguments put forward by market experts to explain the longevity of this bull run.
Mr Steve Einhorn, a former research head at US investment bank Goldman Sachs, for example, asserted that the rally still has legs because the economic cycle is really different this time.
In a Goldman report carried by the London-based Daily Telegraph, he observed that the US economic upswing - now 101 months long - is already way longer than the 60 months' average upturn in the post-World War II era.
At the end of an economic upcycle, key indicators would usually warn of problems in the months leading to a recession, but today, they are pointing in the opposite direction.
What's more, signals that typically flag a prolonged downturn in stock prices are non-existent.
Wage inflation has stayed subdued despite the rosier economic growth. This has, in turn, stayed the hand of the US Federal Reserve in accelerating the pace of interest rates hikes.
There is also little likelihood of a recession for now and investor sentiment has stayed remarkably subdued, despite a record-breaking run on Wall Street.
There is no iron-clad law to say that stock markets can't keep going up for far longer than they did in the past.
For the past 13 years, I have enjoyed a ringside seat to some of the most gripping financial dramas in our lifetime, and the bonus was that I even got to write about them.
But with the recent passing of my father, I realise that it is time to move on and start working on projects that I am passionate about.
This will be my final column and I am glad that I am leaving the newspaper with the market on the upswing.
During the previous Year of the Dog in 2006, the STI hit fresh record-breaking levels.
History may yet repeat itself with the approaching Year of the brown earth Dog.

• Goh Eng Yeow has a new book, Market Smart: How To Grow Your Wealth In An Uncertain World
 
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http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/sto...tocks-favoured-as-goldilocks-works-her-charms
BT OUTLOOK 2018
Consumer stocks favoured as Goldilocks works her charms
This year, the global economy is expected to be neither too hot nor too cold, boosting financial markets
TUE, JAN 02, 2018 - 5:50 AM CAI HAOXIANG haoxiang@sph.com.sg

Singapore
AFTER a triumphant Year of the Rooster when Asian markets are up anywhere from 20 to 40 per cent, investors are in a bullish mood.
Despite rich valuations all around and the threats of higher interest rates, investors remain charmed by Goldilocks, the little girl who liked porridge that was "just right".
This year, the global economy is similarly expected to be neither too hot nor too cold, boosting financial markets.
Consumer stocks in particular appear to be more favoured than before. "With a broader recovery globally, people are more optimistic," said Nikko Asset Management senior analyst Peter Monson.
In North Asia especially, companies like department stores are seeing same-store sales growth pick up, according to Mr Monson. For the house's Asia ex-Japan funds, it has shifted from a "neutral" position on consumer firms a few months ago to an "overweight" position now. This means it is holding more consumer stocks relative to the benchmark.
Stocks it bought include a hotel firm exposed to China assets, a Korean media stock, and Indian real estate, jewellery and consumer staples stocks.
On the other hand, tech stocks have been trimmed. "Technology had a very, very good year ... It's unlikely to continue to deliver the same strong earnings growth, particularly on the memory and hardware side," Mr Monson added.
In South-east Asia, an improving economic outlook should trickle down to consumers, said a DBS report. Profits can be driven by operating efficiencies and cheaper agri-commodity costs, it noted.
Earnings at Asean consumer companies under DBS' coverage are expected to grow by 13.6 per cent in 2018 after a relatively lacklustre 6.8 per cent in 2017.
Its top large-cap picks are Thai spirits maker Thai Beverage, Indomie maker Indofood, and Filipino fried chicken seller Jollibee.
It also likes local restaurant and bakery play BreadTalk. Bakery openings and more efficient food court management can drive earnings growth in 2018. Selling its stakes in properties like Chijmes and Axa Tower can also unlock shareholder value, DBS said.
Financial markets, in their typically exaggerated manner, have swung from depression at the beginning of 2016 to euphoria throughout much of 2017.
A weak US dollar also boosted emerging markets as capital chased higher returns in riskier places.
After trading of the year ended on Dec 29, 2017, Singapore's benchmark Straits Times Index (STI) closed at 3,402.92 points, up 18 per cent from 2016's close of 2,880.76 points.
The total value of the 746 companies listed on the Singapore Exchange (SGX) tracked by The Business Times soared past the S$1 trillion mark, up from S$879 billion at end-2016.
The index rally was driven by banks and property stocks. But technology counters of all stripes did even better, with many doubling in value at least in the course of the year. Some small-cap stocks are even up three to six times.
Real estate investment trusts (Reits) also rose to record highs not seen since the mid-2013 bout of worries over US monetary tightening.

Favourable macroeconomic conditions are putting investors in a good mood. DBS chief investment officer Hou Wey Fook said in an outlook report that weak inflation might allow central banks to keep monetary policies loose, leading to a hunt for yield.
"Equities and corporate debt will continue to be beneficiaries. We therefore think the likelihood of a bear market emerging over the next three to six months is low," he noted.
At UBS, the largest wealth manager in Asia and across the world, Asia-Pacific chief investment office head Tan Min Lan said that Asia's economic outlook looks positive.
"We're excited about the rise of innovation as the region's next driving force," she added. "We see more upside to Asian equities, and are most positive on the equity markets of China, Indonesia, and Thailand."
Asia is at the mid-point of its economic cycle, with the focus shifting from trade recovery to investment and domestic consumption, according to UBS. Innovation will drive growth due to a swift rise in tertiary educated workers, more research and development spending, and pro-innovation policies, it pointed out.
Asian equities should outperform bonds, and in real estate, Singapore is the only Asian market expected to make a gradual recovery, UBS said.
In Singapore, banks are favoured as net interest margins go up with interest rates. With a better economy, loan growth can pick up, along with wealth management businesses.
OCBC Investment Research said in a mid-December note that the STI is still inexpensive, with a "decent" dividend yield of 3.3 per cent.
According to Bloomberg, at 3,400 points, STI forward earnings multiples are at one standard deviation above the 10-year average, while the price-to-book ratio is at half a standard deviation below.
Valuations are not considered excessive largely due to good corporate earnings growth, OCBC said. It favours property stocks, with top picks including CapitaLand, City Developments, UOL, Wheelock and Wing Tai.

Based on technical analysis, said CIMB Research, the upward trend of the STI remains intact. In the near term of one to three months, the index could grind higher as long as the 50-day exponential moving average (EMA) of 3,386 points holds, it said.
It added that a realistic target is 3,549 points, a three-year high, with two resistance levels at 3,460 and 3,525 points. But a possible retracement to the 100-day EMA of 3,336 points is possible after the strong run in the past 12 months, CIMB felt.
Meanwhile, RHB Research pins an end-2018 target of 3,650 points for the STI, or a 7 per cent upside from current levels.
"We are witnessing early signs of recovery in domestic demand - a gradual recovery in the residential property market, and a steady uptick in retail sales," it said.
The house likes consumer companies which are exposed to non-Singapore markets. Its calls include regional supermarkets and convenience store play Dairy Farm International, and Food Empire, which sells instant beverages in Russia and Ukraine.
It also likes Reits which are direct beneficiaries of improvements in the economy, have strong balance sheets and can undertake acquisitions that will add to distributions for unitholders. Here, industrial play Ascendas Reit and hospitality play OUE Hospitality Trust are its top picks.
Meanwhile, RHB head of Singapore small and mid caps, Jarick Seet, highlights recruiter HRnetGroup, semiconductor tester Avi-Tech, and Indonesia water treatment firm Moya Asia Holdings as his top three small-mid cap picks.

On the whole, investors might worry about valuations, but they continue to dance.
In Bank of America Merrill Lynch's (BofAML) latest survey of fund managers in December, there was a record proportion of 45 per cent saying equities are overvalued.
Meanwhile, some 83 per cent think that bond markets are overvalued, near an October record of 85 per cent.
Nevertheless, cash levels are at 4.7 per cent, above a 10-year average of 4.5 per cent. This paves the way for more upside for risk assets in the first quarter, the report said.
People are "long boom, short bust", it said. Contrarian trades will be to short equities and banks, while going long bonds and utilities.
Looking ahead, BofAML said the average investor still believes in "Goldilocks" in 2018. Some 54 per cent of investors it polled expect the high growth and low inflation scenario this year.
However, Keith Wade, chief economist at asset manager Schroders, pointed out in a note that the risks are skewed towards higher inflation, which can bring about higher interest rates.
A global trade boom can push commodity prices higher and lead to stronger growth and inflation around the world. In the US, tax cuts and increased infrastructure spending can also drive inflation higher, he said.
Mr Wade expects three rate hikes from the US Fed this year, which will mean overnight rates at 2.25 per cent at end-2018.
Other major developed economy central banks in Europe and Japan are also expected to tighten monetary policy.
Yet central bank tightening is at an early stage, said JP Morgan Cazenove in a global equity strategy report. According to it, if equities were to tank, it is unlikely that the US Fed will continue with rate hikes.
"The central bank put is still in place," it added.
 
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Perisher

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Come in to beo analyst... maybe can compare this to the stock master's pickings next year.
 

limster

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i'm more interested to see these same analysts 2017 forecasts and how accurate they are, after all, track record is important
 
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