ST Engineering share price slips to S$9.71 — what investors watch before the Feb 27 results

ST Engineering share price slips to S$9.71 — what investors watch before the Feb 27 results

Singapore, Feb 8, 2026, 15:08 SGT — Market closed

  • Shares of ST Engineering ended the previous session at S$9.71, slipping 1.9%.
  • After Singapore Airshow week, supply-chain bottlenecks lingered in the spotlight, along with fresh drone autonomy deals.
  • According to an SGX filing, FY2025 results land on Feb 27, before the bell.

Singapore Technologies Engineering Ltd (STEG.SI) slipped 1.92% to close at S$9.71 on Friday, setting a weaker tone ahead of Monday’s open in Singapore. Shares traded between S$9.58 and S$9.85, with volume hitting roughly 6.94 million, according to market data. 1

This matters: the company’s been in the spotlight at the Singapore Airshow, showcasing fresh pushes in drones and defence, even as aviation suppliers sound alarms over parts and materials. Traders are left picking through headlines, weighing what actually threatens delivery schedules and expenses.

The timing comes just ahead of ST Engineering’s full-year earnings release—a report known to jolt the stock, even if the market is closed for the weekend. Investors will have to wait for the next session to recalibrate their positions.

The key issue in aerospace right now? Demand is hot, but supply chains can’t keep pace. Jeffrey Lam of ST Engineering points out that it can take up to a year just to get the parts and materials ordered—even though building an engine nacelle itself only requires about six weeks. “Some of the shortage is worldwide, so you actually can’t even buy them early if you want,” Lam noted. Paul Wingfield from Future Metals put it bluntly: “The mills can’t make enough to catch up.” 2

ST Engineering is in the spotlight for pushing further into autonomous unmanned systems. According to Defense News, the company and Shield AI, a U.S. drone maker, struck a memorandum of understanding during the airshow. The deal: integrate Shield AI’s Hivemind autonomy software into ST Engineering’s platforms, including for manned-unmanned teaming—where human operators control swarms of unmanned vehicles. The software’s selling point: it’s built to keep drones up and running, even if GPS or communications falter. 3

ST Engineering covers a lot of ground—commercial aerospace, defence and public security, urban solutions, and satcom. It’s not your typical aviation supplier. The diversified business helps cushion any sector-specific slumps, but investors will want to see concrete progress in each segment when results come out next. 4

Plenty could trip this up. Should supply-chain lead times refuse to budge—or stretch out further—airlines may hold off on major maintenance. That leaves suppliers sitting on extra inventory and costs, tightening cash flow. As for drones, even with the tech in place, regulation and airspace rulebooks can keep adoption lagging.

This week, eyes are on whether last week’s airshow buzz translates to actual contracts—or fizzles. Traders will also listen closely for updates on parts supply, with engines and nacelles in particular focus. How those details shake out could move the needle for Singapore’s broader aerospace stocks.

ST Engineering is set to report its FY2025 numbers on Feb. 27, ahead of the Singapore market’s open, according to an SGX filing. The analyst and media briefing will follow at 11:00 a.m. local time. 5

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