Singapore, Jan 29, 2026, 14:47 SGT — Regular session
- Yangzijiang Shipbuilding shares rose 0.9% in afternoon trading on heavy volume.
- The report connects the group to a segment of Evergreen’s $1.47 billion container-ship newbuild programme.
- March 4 earnings and freight-rate signals are now on the near-term radar.
Shares of Yangzijiang Shipbuilding (Holdings) Ltd ticked up Thursday following reports linking the company to new container-ship orders from Evergreen Marine. The stock traded at S$3.38 by 2:47 p.m. in Singapore, a 0.9% gain, after fluctuating between S$3.33 and S$3.40. Volume stood at 13.6 million shares. Yangzijiang has now risen for three sessions in a row, with its 52-week range spanning S$1.80 to S$3.75. (Investing)
Order headlines carry weight for shipbuilders since contracts secure yard utilisation and pricing for years ahead, and can swiftly shift market expectations. When a major liner ramps up orders now, it signals confidence in demand for new vessels—even as the freight market shows signs of faltering.
Freightos reported that container rates from Asia to the U.S. held steady last week, though carriers have begun slashing prices as the pre-Lunar New Year surge starts to wind down. They pegged the cost to ship a 40-foot container at roughly $2,675 to the U.S. West Coast and about $3,928 to the East Coast. (Freightos)
Evergreen’s Singapore-based arm has inked a deal to buy seven 5,900-TEU container ships, each costing up to $82 million, from Yangzijiang’s Jiangsu New Yangzi Shipbuilding, Seatrade Maritime reported Wednesday. The company also placed an order for 16 feeder vessels at CSSC Huangpu Wenchong Shipbuilding, pushing the entire order program to $1.47 billion. Delivery timelines remain under wraps. According to Seatrade, this move boosts Evergreen’s orderbook to 76 vessels valued at more than $11 billion. (Seatrade Maritime News)
Singapore’s central bank kept its policy unchanged on Thursday but highlighted rising risks to growth and inflation, putting the spotlight back on the currency and interest rates for local stocks. OCBC economist Selena Ling described the statement as “a tad more hawkish,” while Maybank’s Chua Hak Bin noted “simmering inflation pressures.” (Reuters)
Overnight, the Federal Reserve held U.S. rates steady, leaving investors searching for clues on the duration of the pause. Matthias Scheiber, head of multi-asset at Allspring Global Investments, noted the Fed is watching how previous cuts play out, while commodity prices may continue to cloud the inflation outlook. (Reuters)
Traders eyeing Yangzijiang will focus on updates around contract values, delivery schedules, and yard-slot clarity. While the stock often reacts to order flow, the real impact emerges later in margins and cash conversion.
The risk is clear: should freight rates fall further post-holiday and volumes drop, owners might pull back, delaying deliveries or pressuring yards to cut prices. Rising costs and contract tweaks would add to the pressure on sentiment.
Yangzijiang’s results drop on March 4, with a spotlight on order intake, pricing, and cash flow. (Tradingview)