Singapore Stock Market Today (Dec 25, 2025): SGX Closed for Christmas, STI Holds Near Highs as 2026 Forecasts Turn Constructive
25 December 2025
5 mins read

Singapore Stock Market Today (Dec 25, 2025): SGX Closed for Christmas, STI Holds Near Highs as 2026 Forecasts Turn Constructive

SINGAPORE (Dec 25, 2025) — Singapore’s stock market is closed today as the city-state marks Christmas Day, a gazetted public holiday. Ministry of Manpower Singapore

With no cash equities trading on the Singapore Exchange (SGX) this Thursday, investors are using the pause to digest the latest Straits Times Index (STI) action from Christmas Eve, assess the inflation signal that helped push the benchmark to fresh levels earlier this week, and line up expectations for 2026 as sell-side and private-bank strategists publish increasingly detailed roadmaps for Singapore equities. OCBC Bank

SGX trading pause: why the market is shut today

Christmas Day (Thursday, Dec 25, 2025) is a national public holiday in Singapore, and market participants broadly expect no SGX securities trading during the holiday. Ministry of Manpower Singapore

That closure comes after an already shortened lead-in to the festive break, with Christmas Eve typically seeing lighter participation and reduced risk-taking across regional markets. The Business Times

Singapore stocks into the break: STI slips 0.06% on Christmas Eve

In the last session before today’s holiday, Singapore shares ended slightly lower on Wednesday (Dec 24).

  • STI: down 0.06% (down 2.63 points) to 4,636.34
  • iEdge Singapore Next 50: up 0.1% (up 1.61 points) to 1,448.61 The Business Times

Even with the modest dip, the broader tone remained resilient after the benchmark had posted a stronger move earlier in the week.

Market breadth and activity

Trading was subdued heading into the holiday, but the internal market picture leaned positive:

  • Advancers:235
  • Decliners:167
  • Volume: about 477.8 million securities
  • Turnover: about S$496.3 million The Business Times

Notable STI movers: REITs firm, ST Engineering softer

Among blue chips:

On activity, Genting Singapore was the most traded counter by volume, with roughly 20.8 million shares changing hands (about S$15.1 million in value). The Business Times

Banks mixed into the close — still a major 2026 conversation

In the Christmas Eve session, the local banks finished mixed:

  • UOB: up 0.1% to S$35.03
  • OCBC: down 0.6% to S$19.78
  • DBS: down 0.1% to S$56.30 The Business Times

Yet stepping back from a single day, banks remain central to Singapore’s equity narrative, especially as investors debate how quickly margins compress in a lower-rate world versus how much fee and wealth income can offset the drift.

The prior catalyst: inflation stayed steady — and the STI jumped 0.6% on Dec 23

The most recent “macro spark” for Singapore equities came earlier in the week.

On Tuesday (Dec 23), Singapore stocks closed higher after authorities maintained their full-year inflation forecasts, with data showing:

  • Core inflation:1.2% in November (same as October)
  • Headline inflation:1.2% in November (same as October) The Business Times

That session saw the benchmark:

Leaders and laggards in that move were also clearly defined:

  • Top blue-chip gainer:SATS, up 1.6% to S$3.81
  • Largest decliner:DFI Retail Group, down 2.2% to US$3.96 The Business Times

And the “most active” counter by volume in that session was CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust, with about 19.6 million units traded (about S$46.2 million). The Business Times

Global markets today: thin holiday trading across Asia, “Santa rally” mood in the US

Because SGX is shut, Singapore investors are leaning more heavily on global cues.

Across Asia on Dec 25, trading was thin and mixed, with several markets closed for Christmas. Japan’s Nikkei was slightly lower, while Chinese shares were supported by signals around maintaining liquidity conditions; many other Asian markets were shut for the holiday. AP News

In the US, the most recent “tape” was Christmas Eve’s shortened session, where US stocks finished higher and major benchmarks notched record closes—reinforcing the year-end “Santa rally” narrative even as participation thins into late December. Reuters

For Singapore, that matters because a firm Wall Street backdrop often supports risk appetite when SGX reopens—especially for globally exposed Singapore names in tech-linked manufacturing, transport, and offshore & marine supply chains.

Sector lens: what Singapore investors are debating heading into 2026

1) Banks: record highs for some — but margins are the pressure point

One of the most watched themes into year-end is whether the bank rally can extend in 2026.

A recent deep dive noted that DBS and OCBC traded at record highs into late December, with DBS around S$55 and OCBC above S$19 as of Dec 19, translating to year-to-date gains of more than 25% for DBS and more than 15% for OCBC. The Business Times

The same analysis flagged a key tension:

  • Net interest margins (NIMs) are under pressure as rates fall and repricing dynamics shift
  • But non-interest income has provided meaningful support (especially for DBS and OCBC) The Business Times

In other words: 2026 bank performance may hinge less on the “old” rate story and more on wealth, fees, deposits, cost discipline, and capital return.

2) REITs: income remains a pillar, with selective upside if borrowing costs ease

Even in a muted Dec 24 session, a REIT—Frasers Logistics & Commercial Trust—led STI gainers. The Business Times

Strategists also continue to pitch Singapore’s equity market as an income-oriented destination where dividend yields and perceived stability stay attractive, particularly if financing conditions improve.

3) Industrials and “Singapore Inc” defensives: watched for earnings resilience

The Dec 24 session’s biggest STI decliner, ST Engineering, is also repeatedly cited in 2026 outlook lists—an example of a stock that can be volatile day-to-day but remains strategically important in medium-term positioning. The Business Times

2026 forecasts and outlooks: the big calls shaping sentiment right now

With SGX closed today, the most actionable “Singapore stock market” content is coming from strategy notes and 2026 outlook pieces.

DBS: STI end-2026 target 4,880; earnings growth led by financials, industrials and TMT

DBS’s latest Singapore equity outlook sets out a measurable year-end target and a sector roadmap:

  • STI end-2026 target:4,880
  • FY26F earnings growth:8.8%, led by financials, industrials and TMT DBS Bank

DBS also frames positioning around:

  • “Secular winners” aligned to longer-run themes
  • Continued attention on small- and mid-caps as “easy money” fades, with value-unlocking and income still in focus DBS Bank

JPMorgan: Singapore equities have a “long way to go”; names 7 top picks

JPMorgan’s regional outlook argues that ASEAN equities could be at an inflection point in 2026 and that Singapore’s market still has runway—particularly due to policy-linked market development efforts and the possibility of renewed inflows. The Business Times

Key points highlighted include:

  • Global funds are under-positioned, with potential upside as allocations rebalance
  • A S$70 billion cash pile could begin rotating from deposits into equities
  • The firm’s top Singapore picks for 2026 include DBS, Keppel, City Developments, CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust, ST Engineering, Sea, and Singtel The Business Times

JPMorgan also explicitly ties its optimism to value-unlocking initiatives and market revitalisation measures that are expected to lift listings and trading activity over time. The Edge Singapore

OCBC: “overweight” call, with dividends and valuation support

OCBC’s house view remains constructive, arguing that even after strong 2025 performance, Singapore equities are “still not expensive” on the STI’s valuation metrics. It also points to sharply lower domestic interest rates and blue-chip dividend yields (described as just under 5% on average) as reasons to stay positive. OCBC Bank

What happens next: a practical watchlist for when SGX reopens

While Singapore’s stock market is quiet today, investors are already positioning for the next active session. Here are the themes likely to dominate the first trading day back:

  1. US-led risk appetite: whether Wall Street’s year-end momentum continues after the holiday closure, helping Asia sentiment. Reuters
  2. Bank leadership vs. rotation: whether investors keep leaning into large-cap banks despite margin pressure concerns, or rotate into laggards and cyclicals. The Business Times
  3. Dividend and yield trade durability: whether REITs and other income names hold bids as investors lock in 2026 income strategies. OCBC Bank
  4. Policy and market-structure tailwinds: ongoing focus on Singapore equity market revitalisation measures and whether they translate into broader participation beyond the STI heavyweights. The Business Times
  5. China signals and regional liquidity: given holiday-thinned conditions, any clear policy messaging out of China can have an outsized impact on regional flows. AP News

Bottom line for Singapore stock market today

Because SGX is closed on Dec 25, 2025, “Singapore stock market today” is less about intraday price action and more about where the market left off (STI 4,636.34) and where leading institutions see it heading next (DBS: 4,880 end-2026; JPMorgan: more runway with policy and flow support; OCBC: valuation and dividends remain attractive). Trading Hours

When trading resumes, the immediate question is whether Singapore equities extend their late-2025 strength into a new year driven by income demand, market reform optimism, and selective growth exposure—or whether the first meaningful pullback of 2026 finally arrives after a remarkably strong run. The Business Times

Stock Market Today

  • Which 13F Filers Hold MA: Mastercard Held by 14 of 21 Funds
    January 14, 2026, 3:25 PM EST. Holdings Channel reviewed the latest batch of 13F filings for the 03/31/2025 period and found Mastercard Inc (MA) held by 14 of the 21 funds analyzed. 13F filings disclose long positions only; shorts are not required to be reported, so the picture may exclude hedges. Among the batch, 7 funds increased MA shares from 12/31/2024 to 03/31/2025, while 6 reduced positions. Looking at all MA holders in the sample (out of 877 funds), aggregate MA shares fell from 9,044,570 at 12/31/2024 to 8,323,551 at 03/31/2025, a decline of about 7.97%. The article notes the top three MA holders on 03/31/2025 but does not name them in the excerpt. The broader view across groups can reveal stock ideas beyond individual filings and keeps Mastercard on the radar.
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