Singapore Stock Market Today (24 Dec 2025): STI Dips in Christmas Eve Half-Day as Banks Turn Mixed and Global “Santa Rally” Signals Build

Singapore Stock Market Today (24 Dec 2025): STI Dips in Christmas Eve Half-Day as Banks Turn Mixed and Global “Santa Rally” Signals Build

SINGAPORE (24 Dec 2025) — Singapore shares ended the Christmas Eve session slightly lower, with trading activity muted as investors headed into the festive break and liquidity thinned across global markets. The Straits Times Index (STI) slipped 2.63 points to 4,636.34, while the iEdge Singapore Next 50 Index edged up 1.61 points to 1,448.61. Market breadth stayed constructive, with advancers beating decliners 235 to 167, even as turnover reflected the shortened session: 477.8 million securities worth about S$496.3 million changed hands. ( [1])

The day’s price action captured a familiar year-end dynamic: Singapore’s benchmark stayed near recent highs, but the market lacked a decisive catalyst to push meaningfully higher — despite bullish cues from Wall Street and renewed debate over what could sustain the rally into 2026.


STI snapshot: A tight range, a quiet tape, and a small dip into the close

The STI traded in a relatively narrow band during the half-day session. Data from the index’s historical record showed the market opened at 4,637.00, hit an intraday high of 4,641.37, and fell to a low of 4,624.48 before settling at 4,636.34. ( [2])

In practical terms, the move was less about a shift in conviction and more about positioning and participation. With fewer traders active and many institutions already “boxed in” ahead of holidays, it took only modest two-way flows to keep the index oscillating within a tight corridor.


The big drivers on SGX: Banks mixed, a REIT leads, and Genting dominates volume

Banks: A split finish kept the index contained

Singapore’s heavyweight banks — typically the market’s key STI driver — ended mixed, helping explain why the headline index struggled to find lift even with more gainers than losers across the broader market.

  • UOB eked out a small gain, closing at S$35.03.
  • OCBC slipped to S$19.78.
  • DBS edged lower to S$56.30. ( [3])

With the banks often acting as a barometer for rates, credit conditions, and regional growth, the split outcome signaled an investor base that is still constructive — but not unanimously chasing prices higher into year-end.

REITs and defensives: Winners still found room to run

On the blue-chip leaderboard, Frasers Logistics & Commercial Trust topped STI gainers, rising 1% to S$0.995. ( [4])

In a holiday-thinned market, this kind of move can matter disproportionately: it reinforces the appeal of yield and defensiveness when investors prefer steadier exposures over high-beta trades.

Biggest drag: ST Engineering

At the other end, ST Engineering was the STI’s largest decliner, falling 1.3% to S$8.35. ( [5])

Most active by volume: Genting Singapore

The most traded STI counter by volume was Genting Singapore, with 20.8 million shares changing hands (about S$15.1 million in value). The stock ended flat at S$0.725. ( [6])

That combination — heavy volume but a flat close — often shows a market in “two minds”: active rotation and short-term trading, but without a strong consensus to reprice the stock sharply.


Why Singapore stocks softened: global “risk-on” cues met holiday reality

Wall Street sets records — but Asian participation is uneven

Even as Singapore dipped slightly, global sentiment was broadly supportive. In the US, the Dow and S&P 500 closed at record highs in holiday-shortened trading, extending a multi-day winning streak as investors leaned into year-end seasonality and resilient economic signals. ( [7])

Across Asia, however, trading was mixed. A regional market update noted that while several markets advanced, Singapore edged down alongside a handful of others, illustrating how local profit-taking and thin liquidity can override otherwise upbeat external cues. ( [8])

The macro spark: faster US growth reshapes rate-cut expectations

One of the dominant narratives influencing global risk appetite today was stronger-than-expected US economic growthand what it might mean for the path of interest rates. The same Asia-focused market coverage pointed to a US growth print of 4.3% in Q3 and highlighted how investors balanced optimism about growth against shifting expectations for the timing of future rate cuts. ( [9])

For Singapore markets, that matters because:

  • Banks tend to react to changes in the rates outlook and yield curves.
  • REITs and high-dividend stocks often benefit when investors believe borrowing costs will fall over time.
  • The Singapore market’s income tilt means global rate narratives can quickly influence relative sector leadership.

Commodities flash a warning — and an opportunity: gold breaks US$4,500

While equities digested growth and rate expectations, commodities delivered an even louder message: gold surged past US$4,500 for the first time, with silver and platinum also hitting record highs in thin year-end liquidity. The move was framed as a hedge against geopolitical and trade risks, alongside expectations for additional US rate cuts in 2026. ( [10])

A Reuters global markets wrap reinforced how extreme some of the year’s “real asset” moves have been, highlighting record-setting gains in precious metals and emphasizing that markets are ending 2025 with strong performance — but also with cross-asset signals flashing more volatility risk into 2026. ( [11])

For Singapore investors, this doesn’t automatically translate into STI direction day-to-day — but it does shape the bigger playbook:

  • Higher gold can reflect hedging demand, not just optimism.
  • It can also hint at positioning for policy easing and uncertainty, which often supports dividend-heavy equities (a Singapore market hallmark).

Forecasts and analysis surfacing today: what markets are watching for 2026

Even in a subdued Singapore session, the forward-looking conversation was busy — and it matters for positioning as the market reopens after Christmas.

1) Can the global equity rally stay broad enough in 2026?

A Reuters 2026 outlook piece highlighted three central pillars for sustaining US equity momentum: continued AI-related spendingstrong corporate profits/earnings growth, and a Federal Reserve that continues cutting rates — while also noting the tension between optimistic targets and caution over valuations. ( [12])

This matters locally because Singapore’s market is not isolated:

  • Global earnings cycles influence risk appetite across Asia.
  • Tech and AI capex trends shape regional supply chains and industrial demand.
  • Rate-cut expectations reverberate through Singapore’s bank and REIT complex.

2) AI “bubble” fears vs. durability — and why Singapore investors care

A Straits Times analysis published today argued that AI-bubble comparisons are getting louder, but suggested the market is not necessarily headed for a sudden collapse, pointing to adoption trends and valuation differences versus the dot-com era. ( [13])

This is particularly relevant to Singapore because many Singapore-based investors actively allocate into US tech, and shifts in global tech leadership and volatility can spill over into local sentiment, even when the STI itself is dominated by banks, telcos, industrials, and REITs.

3) Holiday trading mechanics: the calendar itself is a catalyst

Singapore’s Christmas Eve trade occurred under a partial holiday schedule, with the exchange closed on Christmas Day (25 Dec 2025). ( [14])

That sounds operational, but it has real market impact:

  • Lower liquidity can exaggerate small moves.
  • Short sessions can compress intraday volatility while still allowing meaningful positioning into the close.
  • Price discovery can temporarily shift to US and other markets until SGX reopens.

What to watch when SGX returns after Christmas

When Singapore trading resumes, attention is likely to concentrate on a handful of practical signals — not just headlines:

Global cues that can quickly spill into Singapore

  • Whether US equities hold record territory after the holiday lull. ( [15])
  • How markets reprice expectations for rate cuts in 2026, especially if incoming data forces a rethink. ( [16])
  • Whether the surge in precious metals continues — often a proxy for hedging demand. ( [17])

Singapore-specific market tells

  • Bank leadership: if DBS/OCBC/UOB move in the same direction again, the STI often follows. ( [18])
  • Yield demand: continued bids in REITs and defensives can indicate that investors still prefer income and stability into 2026. ( [19])
  • Breadth vs. index: today’s session showed a small index dip even with more advancers than decliners — a reminder to watch the “market under the surface,” not only the STI headline. ( [20])

Bottom line: Singapore closes Christmas Eve steady — and the real battle shifts to 2026 narratives

Singapore’s stock market on 24 Dec 2025 delivered a classic holiday session: quiet, tight, and mildly lower. The STI’s dip was modest, turnover was lighter, and the market’s internal breadth stayed positive — suggesting no broad risk-off exit, just reduced urgency ahead of the break. ( [21])

At the same time, the global backdrop turned louder: US record highsreshuffling expectations for rate cuts, and precious metals at fresh peaks all point to a market that is optimistic — but still actively pricing uncertainty. ( [22])

For SGX investors, the next meaningful move is less likely to come from Christmas Eve price action itself — and more likely from how the market digests the early-2026 mix of rates, earnings, AI-driven capex, and volatility once full liquidity returns.

References

1. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 2. finance.yahoo.com, 3. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 4. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 5. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 6. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 9. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 10. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.straitstimes.com, 14. www.tradinghours.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 18. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 19. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 20. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 21. www.businesstimes.com.sg, 22. www.reuters.com

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