Singapore, Jan 27, 2026, 15:06 SGT — Regular session
- CapitaLand Investment (SGX:9CI) climbed close to 2% in afternoon trading, reaching S$3.11.
- Investors will be eyeing Singapore’s monetary policy review set for Thursday.
- CLI will report its full-year 2025 results on Feb. 11, ahead of the market open.
CapitaLand Investment Ltd shares rose close to 2% on Tuesday, reaching S$3.11 by 2:53 p.m. local time on the SGX. (StockAnalysis)
The stock’s rally into early 2026 remains on track. It’s gained roughly 15% since January, despite volatility hitting Singapore’s bank-heavy indices. (MarketScreener)
The schedule ahead is packed. According to a Singapore Exchange notice, CapitaLand Investment will release its full-year 2025 unaudited results on Wednesday, Feb. 11, before the market opens—that is, before trading begins that day. Several funds linked to CapitaLand will report even earlier, starting this week. (SGX Links)
Local markets showed mixed action. Singapore’s Straits Times Index dipped Monday, dragged down by a drop in banking stocks. Tuesday saw property shares regain attention, with UOL surging after JPMorgan raised its target price, according to the Business Times. (The Straits Times)
Outside Singapore, Asia kept a risk-on stance. Jose Torres, senior economist at Interactive Brokers, told Reuters in a market wrap that investors are boosting their tech stock bets amid what’s shaping up to be the season’s busiest earnings week. (Reuters)
Rates remain the focal point. A Reuters poll indicates Singapore will likely hold monetary policy steady at Thursday’s review. Economist Intelligence Unit Asia’s Tay Qi Hang highlights stronger growth and steady core inflation as reasons. Standard Chartered’s chief economist Edward Lee said there’s “no urgency” to tighten now but flagged potential action down the line. The MAS primarily steers policy via the Singapore dollar’s trading band, not a benchmark interest rate. (Reuters)
CapitaLand Investment manages real estate investments and earns fees by operating listed funds and private vehicles, alongside holding assets on its own balance sheet and running lodging platforms, according to its company profile. (Reuters)
The stock fluctuated between S$3.05 and S$3.11 on Tuesday. According to Investing.com, the 52-week range stands near S$2.37 to S$3.11, suggesting limited upside without fresh momentum. (Investing)
The macro picture is uneven. Data from TradingEconomics revealed Singapore’s benchmark index climbed roughly 0.8% on Jan. 27. Meanwhile, the 10-year government bond yield inched up to about 2.08%, signaling pressure on rate-sensitive property stocks and REITs. (Trading Economics)
Still, the trade can shift quickly. A surprise move from MAS, another spike in global yields, or a risk-off shock linked to tariffs or U.S. policy could pressure real estate managers with lower valuations and tougher fundraising conditions, even if daily rental demand remains steady.
Investors watching CapitaLand Investment will focus on updates about fee income momentum, capital recycling, and any plans to increase cash returns, especially as more Singapore firms enter reporting season.
According to an SGX filing, the company will hold a results briefing at 9:00 a.m. on the same day its earnings are released. A live webcast will be accessible on its website. (SGX Links)