Today: 10 April 2026
Singapore Stocks: 10 Things to Know Before the SGX Opens on Monday, Nov 17, 2025
16 November 2025
4 mins read

Singapore Stocks: 10 Things to Know Before the SGX Opens on Monday, Nov 17, 2025

Quick read (TL;DR): Wall Street finished mixed on Friday as traders turned their focus to Nvidia’s results this week; oil jumped after a Russian export hub was hit but has since partially normalised; gold firmed; and the U.S. dollar was steadier. China’s latest data cooled—another headwind for Asia—while Japan is lining up a fresh stimulus package. At home, the STI slipped on Friday, the MAS kept policy unchanged in October, and banks’ Q3 messages were about resilient earnings but thinner margins ahead. Watch SIA and ST Engineering into their ex‑dividend dates later this week, and keep an eye on Friday’s detailed Q3 Singapore GDP report. Reuters+8Reuters+8Reuters+8


1) Wall Street lead‑in: mixed close, Big Tech in focus

U.S. stocks ended Friday mixed—Nasdaq up modestly, S&P 500 near flat, Dow lower—as investors braced for Nvidia’s quarterly report, a bellwether for the AI trade that has steered risk sentiment all year. The tone into Monday’s Asia open is cautious. Reuters

2) Energy pulse: oil’s pop, then partial reset

Brent crude jumped more than 2% on Friday after a Ukrainian strike briefly halted exports from Russia’s Black Sea port of Novorossiysk—about 2% of global supply—but loadings have since resumed, tempering the initial supply scare. Energy and transport counters on the SGX may still react to lingering volatility. Reuters+2Reuters+2

3) Safe‑haven check: gold firmed as the dollar steadied

Gold advanced on Friday and was set for a weekly gain, helped by a softer dollar earlier in the week and shifting Fed‑cut odds. For rate‑sensitive Singapore REITs, bullion and FX moves are secondary to yields—but both inform the macro backdrop traders will parse at the open. Reuters

4) Asia macro cue: China data cooled in October

China’s industrial output rose 4.9% y/y and retail sales 2.9% y/y in October—the softest pace in over a year, underscoring uneven demand and keeping Asia risk assets on a short leash. This remains a watchpoint for Singapore cyclicals with China exposure. Reuters+1

5) Policy watch: Japan tees up fresh stimulus

Japan’s finance minister flagged a package exceeding US$110 billion, a supportive headline for regional sentiment even as investors debate how quickly that filters into growth. Reuters

6) Where Singapore left off on Friday

The Straits Times Index (STI) fell 0.7% on Nov 14, with Venture Corp sliding after its update while ThaiBev gained; the local bank trio eased. That sets a mildly risk‑off base for Monday’s open. The Straits Times

7) Singapore banks: solid Q3s, but thinner margins ahead

  • DBS: Q3 profit dipped 2% y/y to S$2.95b but beat estimates; management flagged margin pressure into 2026 even as wealth and deposits underpinned record income. Reuters
  • UOB: Q3 profit slumped 72% to S$443m on pre‑emptive provisions; guidance points to lower NIMs ahead. Reuters
  • OCBC: Q3 profit S$1.98b, a touch above consensus; also cautioned on margins. Expect banks to frame Monday’s tone for the STI again. Reuters

8) Corporate dealflow to watch

Singtel and KKR are in talks to acquire the remainder of ST Telemedia Global Data Centres—a potential multi‑billion‑dollar move that keeps Singapore’s data‑center theme front and centre. Any updates could swing telco and infrastructure names. Reuters

9) The Singapore macro diary this week

  • Detailed Q3 GDP (Economic Survey of Singapore): Fri, Nov 21, 8:00 a.m.—deep dives on sectoral growth, inflation, employment and productivity. Traders will parse manufacturing momentum and services resilience. Ministry of Trade and Industry+1
  • Inflation next week: October CPI is due Nov 24 (next Monday), another checkpoint for the MAS outlook. FXStreet
  • Policy context: The MAS kept policy unchanged in October, maintaining the S$NEER slope, width and centre; core inflation is seen troughing near‑term. Monetary Authority of Singapore

10) Dividends & corporate actions: near‑term names

Among notable ex‑dividend dates approaching on the SGX: Singapore Airlines (Nov 20) and ST Engineering (Nov 21), alongside other counters. Always verify against the SGX corporate‑actions page before placing orders. growbeansprout.com+1


Market mechanics: exact times for Monday’s open

  • Pre‑Open: 08:30–08:58/59 (random close)
  • Non‑Cancel: 08:58/59–09:00
  • Morning trading: 09:00–12:00
  • Mid‑day break: 12:00–13:00 (with its own pre‑open/non‑cancel)
  • Afternoon trading: 13:00–17:00
  • Closing routine: 17:00–17:06; Trade at Close until 17:16
    These phases determine how opening and closing prices are set and when orders can be entered or amended. SGX Rulebooks

What this means for the STI at the bell

  • Tone from the U.S.: A mixed Wall Street close and Nvidia anticipation can keep tech‑adjacent names choppy. Reuters
  • Macro cross‑currents: Oil’s rally and China’s softer prints argue for selective risk taking, with defensives and energy‑linked names in focus. Reuters+1
  • Banks & yield sensitives: Banks remain pivotal after Q3; REITs will key off global rate expectations and the dollar’s path. Reuters+2Reuters+2
  • Singapore policy & data: MAS’s steady stance and Friday’s detailed GDP release are the week’s domestic anchors. Monetary Authority of Singapore+1

Stocks and themes to watch at the open

  • Banks (DBS, OCBC, UOB): Earnings resilience vs. margin compression—watch guidance sensitivity to rates and credit costs. Reuters+1
  • Data‑center & digital infra (Singtel / STT GDC angle): Any headlines could extend interest in the asset class. Reuters
  • Travel & defence (SIA, ST Engineering): Trading around this week’s ex‑div dates often sees positioning shifts. growbeansprout.com
  • Energy‑linked plays: Oil’s geopolitical premium supports cash‑flow optics but keep an eye on reversals if supply normalises. Reuters

One last checklist before 9:00 a.m. SGT


Note: This article is for information only and does not constitute investment advice.

Stock Market Today

  • Fuller, Smith & Turner PLC Buys Back 15,000 Shares in Ongoing Buyback Program
    April 10, 2026, 3:38 AM EDT. Fuller, Smith & Turner PLC (FSTA) purchased 15,000 "A" Ordinary Shares at an average price of 678.24 pence on April 9, 2026, through Deutsche Bank AG's London branch as part of its share buyback program initiated in January. The shares are held in Treasury, reducing the total listed voting rights to 31,478,453. The transaction aims to enhance shareholder value by managing the company's capital structure. This buyback is in line with regulations under the UK Market Abuse Regulation and Disclosure and Transparency Rules, providing clarity on ownership for investors and complying with reporting requirements.

Latest article

Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 10.04.2026

10 April 2026
LIVEMarkets rolling coverageStarted: April 10, 2026, 12:00 AM EDTUpdated: April 10, 2026, 3:44 AM EDT Fuller, Smith & Turner PLC Buys Back 15,000 Shares in Ongoing Buyback Program April 10, 2026, 3:38 AM EDT. Fuller, Smith & Turner PLC (FSTA) purchased 15,000 "A" Ordinary Shares at an average price of 678.24 pence on April 9, 2026, through Deutsche Bank AG's London branch as part of its share buyback program initiated in January. The shares are held in Treasury, reducing the total listed voting rights to 31,478,453. The transaction aims to enhance shareholder value by managing the company's capital structure. This
MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

9 April 2026
MARA Holdings shares rose 1.7% to $9.67 Thursday despite Cantor Fitzgerald cutting its price target to $10. The company recently sold 15,133 bitcoin for $1.1 billion and agreed to repurchase $1 billion in convertible notes at a discount. MARA is expanding into AI and cloud infrastructure, but fourth-quarter revenue fell 6% and it posted a $1.7 billion net loss.
CoreWeave secures fresh $21 billion Meta AI deal as debt push raises stakes

CoreWeave secures fresh $21 billion Meta AI deal as debt push raises stakes

9 April 2026
Meta Platforms signed a new $21 billion deal with CoreWeave for AI cloud computing capacity through 2032, according to a securities filing. CoreWeave shares rose 3.4% in after-hours trading. The agreement adds to a $14.2 billion commitment disclosed last September. CoreWeave also launched $3 billion in convertible notes and upsized a senior-notes deal to $1.75 billion.
Tesla Revives Cheaper EV Push With New Compact SUV as Sales Pressure Builds

Tesla Revives Cheaper EV Push With New Compact SUV as Sales Pressure Builds

9 April 2026
Tesla is developing a lower-cost compact SUV, with initial production planned for Shanghai, Reuters reported Thursday. The company built 408,386 vehicles and delivered 358,023 in the first quarter, leaving its widest gap in at least four years. Reuters said the new SUV likely will not reach production this year. Tesla did not respond to questions about the project.
NIO ES9 Price Starts at 528,000 Yuan as Flagship SUV Bet Faces China EV Slump

NIO ES9 Price Starts at 528,000 Yuan as Flagship SUV Bet Faces China EV Slump

9 April 2026
NIO opened pre-orders for its ES9 flagship SUV Thursday, pricing it at 528,000 yuan with battery or 420,000 yuan under its Battery-as-a-Service plan. March deliveries rose 136% year-on-year, but NIO’s U.S. shares fell 4.9% after the announcement. The ES9 enters a shrinking premium SUV market in China, competing with Li Auto and Aito. CEO William Li warned chip shortages could add up to 10,000 yuan per vehicle.
Westpac’s $7 Billion Windfall Ignites ASX Rally Despite Mining Slump – Nov 3, 2025
Previous Story

ASX today: 7 things to know before the Sydney open — Nov 17, 2025 (SPI futures, AUD, iron ore, oil, gold, and the RBA week ahead)

London Stock Exchange at Record Highs – Inside the Historic Market’s Brexit Battle and 2025 Revival
Next Story

London Stock Market: What to Know Before the FTSE 100 Opens on Monday, 17 November 2025

Go toTop