SINGAPORE — Dec 12, 2025 — Singapore Technologies Engineering Ltd (ST Engineering) shares are back in the spotlight as investors weigh a string of recent corporate developments: a new defence partnership with France’s Safran, growing visibility on a potential strategic move for its loss-making satcom unit iDirect, and a dividend roadmap that could lift total FY2025 dividends (if approved) beyond what many income investors had pencilled in a few months ago. [1]
As of Dec 12, 2025 (2:08pm Singapore time), ST Engineering traded at S$8.34, up 1.58% on the day, according to SGinvestors’ market snapshot. [2]
Below is a comprehensive roundup of today’s (12.12.2025) most relevant news, forecasts, and analyst commentary around ST Engineering stock (SGX:S63; Reuters: STEG.SI; Bloomberg: STE:SP)—written in a Google News/Discover-friendly style: clear, current, and grounded in primary disclosures and widely cited research. [3]
ST Engineering stock today: price action and why the market is paying attention
ST Engineering’s share price is being watched for one big reason: the company is simultaneously showing strong operational momentum (contract wins and a record order book) while trying to contain a problem child (iDirect) that has dragged on investor confidence. Those two forces—core strength vs. satcom uncertainty—are shaping the near-term narrative for S63. [4]
The company has been listed on SGX since 1997 and is a component of major indices including the Straits Times Index (as highlighted in its share information page). That matters because it can influence institutional flows—especially when catalysts (like dividends or major portfolio moves) hit the tape. [5]
Current news roundup: what just happened in December 2025
1) ST Engineering + Safran expand cooperation into defence (Dec 10, 2025)
On Dec 10, 2025, ST Engineering announced that it and Safran Electronics & Defence expanded their global cooperation into the defence domain via an MOU.
The companies said the tie-up aims to strengthen cooperation across areas such as:
- joint business development
- technology integration
- lifecycle support and sustainment services
A stated focus is integrating Safran’s expertise in optronics, avionics, and PNT (Positioning, Navigation and Timing) electronics with ST Engineering’s integrated defence solutions—squarely aligned with the global push toward defence modernisation. [6]
Why it matters for the stock: Defence is typically viewed as a “stickier” demand pool with longer-cycle contracts. For a conglomerate like ST Engineering, credible international partnerships can improve its pitch in export markets and potentially support higher-quality order intake over time. (That’s the market logic; the MOU itself does not guarantee revenue.) [7]
2) Quantum cybersecurity collaboration with ORCA Computing (Dec 10, 2025)
Also on Dec 10, a Business Wire release described a collaboration between ORCA Computing and ST Engineering aimed at advancing cybersecurity outcomes using quantum machine learning for anomaly detection—targeting use cases such as intrusion detection and large-scale network monitoring. [8]
Why it matters: This sits in the “option value” bucket. It’s not a near-term earnings driver by default, but it supports ST Engineering’s positioning as a tech-forward security player—useful when pitching to government and critical infrastructure customers. [9]
3) AI recognition: Tech4Good award mention (Dec 3, 2025)
A Dec 3 Business Wire release reported ST Engineering won Silver for Best Use of AI in Sustainability at the All About AI Tech4Good Awards. [10]
Why it matters: Awards don’t equal profits, but they reinforce the corporate story that ST Engineering is investing into applied AI—particularly relevant given the market’s preference for “defence + digital” platforms with recurring software/services angles. [11]
The fundamental anchor: ST Engineering’s 9M2025 update and record order book
The company’s most market-moving disclosure in the recent cycle remains its 9M2025 business update, which highlighted both accelerating revenue and a record backlog.
Key figures disclosed by ST Engineering include:
- 3Q2025 revenue: S$3.1b, up 13% year-on-year
- New contracts in 9M2025: S$14.0b (including S$4.9b in 3Q2025)
- Order book: S$32.6b as of end-September 2025 (a new high)
- About S$2.8b expected to be delivered in the rest of 2025 (per the company’s update) [12]
Segmentally, ST Engineering also pointed to broad-based growth, with 3Q2025 year-on-year revenue increases across its major business lines (Commercial Aerospace, Defence & Public Security, Urban Solutions & Satcom). [13]
Why it matters for S63 investors: Order book and contract wins are a credibility signal—especially for multi-segment industrials. A rising backlog can support revenue visibility and soften the blow if one segment (satcom) underperforms. [14]
Dividends: what’s already paid vs. what’s proposed (and what needs approval)
Dividend investors have had a lot to digest—because ST Engineering’s update blended routine quarterly dividends with a proposed special dividend linked to divestment proceeds.
Confirmed: 3Q2025 interim dividend already declared (and paid)
ST Engineering declared a 3Q2025 interim dividend of 4.0 cents per share, with:
- Ex-date: 21 Nov 2025
- Payment date: 5 Dec 2025 [15]
Proposed: final dividend + special dividend (subject to 2026 AGM approval)
In its 3Q/9M update materials, ST Engineering indicated it will propose:
- Final dividend for FY2025:6.0 cents per share (aligned with its 2025 Dividend Plan)
- Special dividend:5.0 cents per share, tied to value realisation from divestments
If shareholders approve both at the 2026 AGM, the company said total FY2025 dividends would be 23.0 cents per share. [16]
The company linked the special dividend to cash proceeds generated by divestments (LeeBoy, CityCab shareholding interests, and SPTel), which it quantified at S$594m in cash proceeds and S$258m in divestment gains (after tax) year-to-date. [17]
The practical takeaway:
- The quarterly dividend stream is clearer and already in motion.
- The special + final boost is meaningful, but not automatic—it is explicitly subject to shareholder approval at the 2026 AGM. [18]
The iDirect “reset”: impairment, strategic options, and why it’s central to the 2026 rerating debate
What the company disclosed
In an SGX-linked announcement dated Nov 12, 2025, ST Engineering said it assessed the Value in Use (VIU) of the iDirect group at S$170m as at 30 Sep 2025, leading to a non-cash impairment of S$667m. [19]
ST Engineering attributed the pressure on iDirect to a tougher near-term satcom environment and operational headwinds, including weaker performance trends (revenue and EBITDA declines in 9M2025 for iDirect) and an outlook reset. It also stated it is evaluating strategic options for iDirect, while emphasizing that no definitive agreement had been reached and there is no certainty a transaction will occur. [20]
What analysts are saying (and why their language matters)
This is where the tone shifts from “accounting headline” to “potential catalyst.”
- DBS Research (Nov 13, 2025) described the impairment as a cleanup that can remove amortisation drag, upgraded ST Engineering to BUY, and set a higher target price (TP) of S$9.40—explicitly framing an “imminent satcom divestment” as a rerating catalyst in its thesis. [21]
- The Business Times (Nov 13, 2025) reported CGS International upgraded its call to “add” and raised its target price to S$9.50, while noting Morningstar kept a fair value estimate of S$8.10 and sounded more cautious about iDirect’s structural challenges. [22]
Why the market cares: The impairment itself is non-cash—but the strategic question is cash-real: can ST Engineering stop iDirect from consuming management attention and capital, and can it reduce the earnings drag enough to lift group margins? Analysts arguing for a rerating are essentially betting that “Satcom stops hurting” becomes a cleaner story in 2026. [23]
Forecasts and price targets on Dec 12, 2025: what the consensus range looks like
Analyst target prices vary depending on the dataset and update cadence, but the shape is fairly consistent: mid-to-high single-digit upside from today’s price, with a wide uncertainty band.
Here are several widely cited snapshots available as of Dec 12, 2025:
- SGinvestors: cites an average target price of S$9.20 (about 10.3% upside from its displayed share price snapshot), and lists recent broker targets including OCBC (S$9.80) and RHB (S$9.40) among others. [24]
- TradingView: shows an analyst price target of S$8.91, with a high estimate of S$10.50 and low estimate of S$7.28. [25]
- ValueInvesting.io: shows an average 12‑month forecast of S$9.05 with a range of S$7.35 to S$10.50, and a consensus recommendation marked BUY (as displayed on that page). [26]
- Growbeansprout: lists a consensus share price target of S$8.70 as of Dec 12, 2025, implying modest upside from its shown spot price at the time of capture. [27]
- DBS Research (broker note): TP S$9.40 with a BUY stance, explicitly tying valuation to satcom strategic progress and defence momentum. [28]
How to interpret this (without falling into the “one number to rule them all” trap):
- The market is not pricing ST Engineering as a distressed story; it’s pricing it as a durable industrial with a contested satcom segment.
- The top-end targets cluster around the idea that defence + aerospace strength continues and the iDirect drag is reduced. The lower-end targets reflect uncertainty around satcom and execution risks. [29]
Balance sheet and leverage: “healthy” doesn’t mean “debt-free”
A Dec 2, 2025 Simply Wall St analysis framed ST Engineering’s balance sheet as manageable while still meaningfully levered. It cited (based on the company’s balance sheet figures it referenced):
- debt of S$5.52b at end-June 2025 (down from S$6.14b a year earlier)
- cash of S$353.2m, implying net debt around S$5.16b
- and discussed leverage/coverage metrics such as debt-to-EBITDA and interest cover [30]
Why this matters for shareholders: In a higher-rate world, leverage is not just a spreadsheet number—it can shape capital allocation choices: buybacks vs. M&A vs. dividends vs. debt paydown. ST Engineering’s own narrative (special dividend from divestment proceeds, plus continued investment posture) suggests management believes it can do more than one thing at once—but the satcom situation is exactly the kind of variable that can change that balance. [31]
What to watch next: near-term catalysts for ST Engineering (S63)
Here’s what typically matters most for S63 over the next few months, based on disclosed timelines and analyst framing:
- Any concrete update on iDirect strategic options
ST Engineering has confirmed active discussions but also warned there’s no certainty of a deal. DBS, however, is explicitly watching for progress as a rerating trigger and notes management commentary about negotiations. [32] - FY2025 results and dividend confirmation mechanics
The company has already laid out the proposed final + special dividend structure, but the market will focus on confirmation, the path to shareholder approval, and what that implies for future payout policy. [33] - Contract wins cadence and mix
With a record order book disclosed as of end-Sep 2025, investors will watch whether 2026 order intake sustains momentum—especially in higher-margin defence and resilient aerospace MRO work. [34] - Follow-through on defence partnerships and international pipeline
The Safran defence MOU reads like a “platform move.” Markets often wait for the second step (program wins, deployments, sustainment contracts) before upgrading the valuation story. [35]
Bottom line (Dec 12, 2025)
ST Engineering stock is being pulled by two gravitational fields:
- Core momentum: record order book, steady multi-segment growth, and a dividend roadmap that could lift FY2025 total dividends (pending approvals). [36]
- Satcom uncertainty: the iDirect impairment and the strategic review are the hinge variables—investors want clarity on how quickly the earnings drag can be reduced or removed. [37]
If you’re reading the tape like a realist (as opposed to a fortune-teller), the market’s current stance looks like: “We believe the core business; show us the satcom endgame.” [38]
References
1. www.stengg.com, 2. sginvestors.io, 3. www.stengg.com, 4. www.stengg.com, 5. www.stengg.com, 6. www.stengg.com, 7. www.stengg.com, 8. www.businesswire.com, 9. www.businesswire.com, 10. www.businesswire.com, 11. www.businesswire.com, 12. www.stengg.com, 13. www.stengg.com, 14. www.stengg.com, 15. www.stengg.com, 16. links.sgx.com, 17. www.stengg.com, 18. links.sgx.com, 19. links.sgx.com, 20. links.sgx.com, 21. www.dbs.com.sg, 22. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 23. www.dbs.com.sg, 24. sginvestors.io, 25. www.tradingview.com, 26. valueinvesting.io, 27. growbeansprout.com, 28. www.dbs.com.sg, 29. links.sgx.com, 30. simplywall.st, 31. www.stengg.com, 32. links.sgx.com, 33. links.sgx.com, 34. www.stengg.com, 35. www.stengg.com, 36. www.stengg.com, 37. links.sgx.com, 38. www.dbs.com.sg


