Singapore, Jan 27, 2026, 15:39 (SGT) — Regular session
- Shares of Hongkong Land jumped 1.45% to $8.40 in Singapore, hitting a 52-week peak.
- Rate-sensitive property stocks are under the spotlight ahead of Wednesday’s Fed decision and Thursday’s MAS review in Singapore.
- The Straits Times Index stayed close to its record highs during afternoon trading.
Shares of Hongkong Land Holdings Limited rose 1.45% to $8.40 on Tuesday, hitting $8.43—the peak of their 52-week range—during active trading in Singapore. By 3:29 p.m., roughly 1.46 million shares had traded, with the price fluctuating between $8.31 and $8.43. (SG Investors)
Singapore stocks held steady close to record highs, with real estate and other rate-sensitive sectors still attracting attention. The Straits Times Index gained roughly 1% for the day, reaching an intraday peak of 4,914.03. (Investing.com Canada)
Why this matters now: Investors are bracing for central bank cues that could quickly shift property valuations — through borrowing costs and the yields demanded on real estate and related stocks. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will announce policy on Thursday. Most economists surveyed by Reuters predict no change. “Growth outperformance and stable core inflation has reduced near-term pressure to ease,” said Tay Qi Hang at the Economist Intelligence Unit. (Reuters)
Beyond Singapore, the U.S. Federal Reserve concludes its two-day meeting Wednesday, with rates likely to stay put between 3.50% and 3.75%, Reuters reported. Last week, Michael Pearce, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, described the near-term outlook as “benign,” despite political tensions weighing on the Fed. (Reuters)
Risk appetite remains firm. Asian shares climbed to new records Tuesday, eyes fixed on major U.S. earnings reports, even as fresh tariff news from Washington failed to faze investors. (Reuters)
Hongkong Land, primarily listed in London and secondarily in Singapore, holds and oversees prime office and luxury retail properties in key Asian cities. Its flagship portfolio is centered in Hong Kong’s Central district. (Reuters)
Hongkong Land holders face a two-sided rate story. Falling global yields tend to boost commercial property values and ease financing burdens. But a sudden shift upward could quickly drag down valuations and sour sentiment.
Yet the trade isn’t one-directional. Should MAS hint at tighter policy later this year, or if the Fed’s rhetoric leads markets to expect fewer rate cuts, bond yields could spike. In that scenario, property-linked stocks might lose ground even without any fresh company updates.
Thursday brings the MAS policy statement, which will include updated inflation forecasts. Then on Wednesday, all eyes turn to the Fed decision. Traders are focused on whether either central bank tweaks its language enough to alter rate expectations into mid-year.