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Hongkong Land stock slides in Singapore as China rate decision nears, buybacks in view
19 January 2026
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Hongkong Land stock slides in Singapore as China rate decision nears, buybacks in view

Hong Kong, Jan 19, 2026, 15:47 HKT — Regular session underway.

Shares of Hongkong Land Holdings Limited (SGX: H78) slipped 1.2% to $8.16 in Singapore by 3:32 p.m., pulling back from a January rally that’s boosted the stock roughly 17% this month. The stock had closed at $8.26 on Friday, with Monday’s volume hitting about 1.45 million shares.

The pullback comes as investors shift focus to Singapore real estate stocks, betting that lower borrowing costs and strong cash returns will reflect in upcoming earnings. The FTSE ST All-Share Real Estate Investment and Services Index has surged nearly 14% this year, outperforming a broader Bloomberg index of Asian real estate stocks by about 10 percentage points, according to Bloomberg data. “Real estate stocks in Singapore have garnered increasing interest over the past year, buoyed by a more favourable interest rate environment,” noted OCBC analysts including Andy Wong. The Edge Singapore

Hongkong Land remains closely tied to China, and the latest economic figures have put investors on edge about that link. China’s economy expanded 4.5% year-on-year in Q4, but property investment plunged 17.2% in 2025, Reuters reported. HSBC’s Frederic Neumann also flagged weak retail sales and ongoing struggles in fixed asset investment, underscoring persistent headwinds.

Investors are focused on Beijing’s loan prime rate (LPR), a key benchmark for corporate loans and mortgages, set to be announced Tuesday. A Reuters poll found all participants predict the one-year and five-year LPR will hold steady at 3.0% and 3.5%, despite last week’s sector-specific rate cuts and hints from the central bank about potential broader easing later this year. The report also noted that new home prices in China fell further in December.

Company filings reveal Hongkong Land has been relying on share buybacks, a move closely watched by traders when news flow dries up. On Jan. 16, the company repurchased 180,000 shares at a weighted average price of $8.2364, with plans to cancel them.

Hongkong Land, part of Jardine Matheson, holds and manages prime office and luxury retail properties in Hong Kong and Singapore, along with developments on the Chinese mainland. The spotlight often falls on its moves in Central, a market grappling with prolonged weak leasing and changing office space demands.

Risk appetite in Asia remained shaky Monday, with investors digesting new tariff chatter alongside a surge in precious metals. By early afternoon, Singapore’s Straits Times Index had slipped roughly 0.5%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index dropped about 1%.

The downside is clear: if China delays broad easing and the property slump persists, sentiment toward developers exposed to the mainland could sour fast, despite recent gains. A volatile macro environment usually weighs more heavily on the less liquid Singapore-listed property stocks.

Tuesday brings China’s LPR fixing, with eyes on any hints from officials about how aggressively they’ll shore up the housing market. Over in Singapore, traders are set to monitor Hongkong Land’s upcoming post-market buyback update to see if the company maintains its capital return momentum ahead of reporting season.

Stock Market Today

  • CAVA Q1 CY2026 Earnings Beat Expectations, Shares Surge
    May 19, 2026, 6:02 PM EDT. CAVA (NYSE:CAVA) posted a strong Q1 CY2026 performance with revenue rising 32.1% year-on-year to $438.3 million, surpassing analyst estimates by 4.7%. The Mediterranean fast-casual chain reported GAAP earnings per share of $0.20, a 14% beat over consensus, and adjusted EBITDA of $61.73 million. Same-store sales increased 9.7%, while operating margin improved to 5.8% from 4.7% a year earlier. The company ended the quarter with 459 locations, up from 393. CEO Brett Schulman highlighted CAVA's resilience amid macroeconomic and geopolitical pressures. Market capitalization stands at $9.3 billion. Analysts forecast 20.5% revenue growth for the next 12 months, reflecting confidence in the brand's expansion and menu offerings despite a projected growth slowdown.

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