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Wilmar International Limited Stock: Latest News, Forecasts and Analyst Targets (Dec 13, 2025)
13 December 2025
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Wilmar International Limited Stock: Latest News, Forecasts and Analyst Targets (Dec 13, 2025)

Wilmar International Limited (SGX: F34) is heading into mid-December with investors juggling two very different storylines: improving underlying operating momentum versus a multi-jurisdiction legal overhang that keeps headlines (and sentiment) jumpy.

Wilmar shares last closed at S$3.07 on Friday, Dec 12, 2025.

Below is a detailed, up-to-date roundup of the key Wilmar stock news, what the latest results say, and where analysts’ price targets and forecasts are clustering as of 13 December 2025.


What’s moving Wilmar stock right now

1) Q3 results: core profits rose, but headline earnings swung into a loss

Wilmar’s 3Q2025 Executive Financial Summary shows a sharp split between operational performance and reported profit:

  • Revenue: US$19.07bn (+7.4% y/y)
  • Core net profit: US$357.2m (+71.6% y/y)
  • Net profit/(loss):-US$347.7m (from +US$254.4m profit a year earlier)

The company attributed the headline loss largely to a IDR 11.88 trillion (~US$712m) payment linked to an Indonesia Supreme Court decision tied to cooking oil actions during FY2021 shortages.

Operationally, Wilmar described stronger performance across core segments—helped by China’s oil/flour/rice businesses, better soybean crushing margins and volumes, and steady palm oil pricing supporting plantations.

2) Legal risk is now the “discount rate” investors apply

Wilmar’s biggest near-term valuation debate isn’t only about palm oil, soy crush spreads, or consumer demand. It’s about how investors price uncertainty across multiple legal/regulatory matters:

  • Indonesia cooking oil/export permits case (financially large and politically sensitive).
  • China contract fraud case involving a subsidiary of Yihai Kerry Arawana (YKA), Wilmar’s China-listed arm—now in appeal.

Analysts explicitly cite these issues as drivers of reputational risk and reduced earnings visibility, particularly because China is a major profit contributor for the group.

3) Portfolio moves in India keep the growth narrative alive

While the legal headlines dominate, Wilmar has also been making strategically meaningful moves—especially in India.

In November, Wilmar announced and then completed the purchase of a 13% stake in AWL Agri Business Limited (formerly Adani Wilmar) via its wholly-owned unit Lence, lifting AWL to an indirect 56.94%-owned subsidiary of Wilmar after completion.

This increases Wilmar’s control over a large, branded staples platform in a structurally growing consumption market—exactly the kind of “steady demand” counterweight investors often like in a commodity-exposed group.


The Indonesia situation: what we know, what it means

In late September, Reuters reported that Indonesia’s Supreme Court overturned earlier acquittals of major palm oil firms (including Wilmar Group), connected to conduct around export permits during 2022 restrictions. Wilmar had placed a large “security deposit” with the Attorney General’s Office that the court indicated would be treated as part of the penalty transferred to the state treasury. Reuters

A DBS commentary summarized the impact as the court ruling against five subsidiaries and ordering compensation totalling IDR 11.88 trillion (roughly US$709m in that note).

Why investors care:
Even when the cash impact is known (or largely provisioned/paid), these events can still pressure valuation because they raise questions about:

  • future regulatory exposure,
  • operational constraints in a key origin market,
  • and the likelihood of further penalties or restrictions.

Wilmar itself signaled that, despite the shock in reported earnings, it expected the business to remain resilient for the rest of the year, while also flagging sensitivity to government policy shifts.


The China contract fraud case: appeal underway, uncertainty remains

A second headline driver emerged in China involving Guangzhou Yihai, a PRC-incorporated subsidiary within Wilmar’s China ecosystem.

Wilmar disclosed that Guangzhou Yihai lodged an appeal with the Anhui Provincial High People’s Court against a first-instance criminal judgment that found it guilty of contractual fraud, with a hearing date not yet set (as of the announcement).

Local reporting summarized that a Wilmar-linked unit was found guilty and ordered to be jointly liable for losses of about 1.88 billion yuan, alongside other penalties, and that Wilmar/YKA intended to appeal.

Why this matters for the stock:
China is a massive earnings engine for Wilmar’s broader platform. A legal issue that is (a) large enough to be financially material and (b) reputationally sticky can justify a market discount even before final liability is confirmed.

That’s exactly the logic some analysts have used when turning more cautious.


Corporate governance: board committee reshuffle in December

On Dec 1, 2025, Wilmar announced a re-constitution of board committees:

  • Chairman Kuok Khoon Hong ceased to be a member of the Risk Management Committee and Board Sustainability Committee.
  • George Yong-Boon Yeo joined the Risk Management Committee.
  • Soh Gim Teik joined the Board Sustainability Committee.

The announcement also included updated committee compositions.

Governance changes don’t usually move a stock on their own, but in a period when “risk management” is literally the market’s obsession, investors tend to read these moves more closely.


Nigeria angle: PZ Cussons update keeps PZ Wilmar deal on the radar

In a December 2025 update concluding its strategic review of Africa, UK consumer group PZ Cussons reiterated that it had announced the sale of its 50% equity interest in PZ Wilmar Limited (a Nigerian edible oils JV) to Wilmar for US$70 million, with completion expected shortly.

Wilmar and PZ Cussons had jointly announced the transaction in June 2025, with completion subject to relevant approvals.

What investors may take from this:
If/when completed, Wilmar gains fuller control of a consumer-facing platform in a high-growth demographic market—though Nigeria’s FX and operating environment can add its own volatility.


Wilmar stock forecast and analyst targets: where expectations sit now

The bullish-leaning “institutional target” cluster: roughly S$3.0 to S$3.6

A compilation of recent research targets tracked in Singapore shows price targets (from reports within roughly the prior few months) ranging from S$3.00 to S$3.58, with an average around S$3.27 and median S$3.25 (as of Dec 13, 2025 on that tracker).

Separately, Simply Wall St displayed an average target around S$3.18, with a broader high/low spread of roughly S$3.57 / S$2.48.

The more cautious view: legal risk can overwhelm the “earnings recovery narrative”

The most talked-about bearish call in early December came from Aletheia Capital, which downgraded Wilmar from “buy” to “sell” and cut its target price to S$2.50 (from S$3.49), explicitly citing legal woes and reputational risk. The Business Times

Why “consensus” looks messy depending on the source

Different platforms pull from different analyst universes and update schedules. For example, one Singapore investing platform displayed a “consensus share price target” around S$2.586 (as of Dec 13, 2025 on that page), implying downside from S$3.07. Beansprout

Meanwhile, TipRanks showed an average target around S$3.11, with a low of S$2.50 and high near S$3.60, and a consensus rating around “Hold.” TipRanks

How to interpret this without getting hypnotized by decimals:

  • Targets are not a single “truth number.”
  • The spread itself is information: Wilmar is being priced as a stock where outcomes depend on legal/regulatory pathways, not just normal business execution.

What to watch next (the catalysts investors are likely tracking)

1) Appeal timelines and disclosures (China and Indonesia)

  • Any scheduled hearing date, revised loss estimate, settlement signal, or additional provisioning can move the stock quickly because the market is currently trading “headline risk.”

2) Next earnings: Q4/FY2025

One widely followed market calendar view points to a projected Q4 2025 earnings release around mid-February 2026.

3) Integration and performance in India (AWL Agri)

With Wilmar now holding 56.94% indirectly, investors will look for clearer evidence that increased control translates into:

  • stronger distribution economics,
  • margin stability,
  • and less “JV complexity.” SGX Links

4) Completion progress on PZ Wilmar (Nigeria)

Given PZ Cussons’ December update, confirmation of completion (and any commentary about strategy and capital allocation) could become a near-term news item.


Bottom line on Wilmar International (SGX: F34) as of Dec 13, 2025

Wilmar’s latest financial disclosures show a company with improving underlying operations—higher core profit and solid volumes—but with reported earnings and valuation still dominated by legal and policy-driven uncertainty spanning Indonesia and China.

Analyst targets broadly cluster around the low-to-mid S$3 range, but the existence of credible S$2.50 downside-case targets underscores that, for now, headline risk is part of the investment thesis—whether you like it or not.

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