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Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Stock Forecast: Latest News, Orderbook Update and Analyst Targets for SGX: BS6 (21 Dec 2025)
21 December 2025
7 mins read

Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Stock Forecast: Latest News, Orderbook Update and Analyst Targets for SGX: BS6 (21 Dec 2025)

SINGAPORE, 21 Dec 2025 — Yangzijiang Shipbuilding (Holdings) Ltd (SGX: BS6) ends 2025 with a familiar shipbuilder paradox: a towering orderbook and record profitability on one hand, and a market that still frets about geopolitics, policy shocks, and the next turn in the ship-order cycle on the other.

As of the most recent trading day before today (Friday, 19 Dec 2025), Yangzijiang Shipbuilding shares closed at S$3.37, down 2.88% on the session, with heavy trading volume.

What’s changed in the past few months isn’t the headline backlog — it’s the shape of demand (more “green” ships), the timing of deliveries (stretching into 2030), and the risk map (sanctions compliance and shifting US trade policy). Here’s a comprehensive roundup of the latest company updates, market-moving news, and the most-cited analyst forecasts available as of 21 Dec 2025.


Where Yangzijiang Shipbuilding stock stands now

The stock’s December tape tells a story of a strong run that cooled into year-end: Investing.com’s historical data shows the share price closing at S$3.37 on 19 Dec, after trading as high as S$3.58 in the past 52 weeks and as low as S$1.80.

That matters because shipbuilding equities often trade less on “this quarter’s earnings” and more on what investors believe about the next 12–36 months of:

  • order intake momentum,
  • pricing power,
  • and whether policy/geopolitics will slam the door on customers.

The biggest 2025 catalyst: Yangzijiang’s orderbook is still enormous — and increasingly “green”

The latest operational snapshot (3Q/November updates)

By mid-November, Yangzijiang reported year-to-date order wins of US$2.17 billion and an outstanding orderbook of about US$22.8 billion, with clean-energy vessels accounting for ~71% of total orderbook value.

The orderbook breakdown is what investors obsess over because it reveals not just size, but mix and complexity. As of the company’s November disclosures, the backlog included 245 vessels with total contract value around US$22.83 billion, spanning deliveries from 2025 to 2030.

The composition (by value and unit count) underscores how container ships still dominate, while gas/clean-energy tonnage rises in strategic importance:

  • Containerships: 126 vessels, about US$16.21b
  • Oil tankers: 47 vessels, about US$2.40b
  • Gas carriers (LEG/LPG/VLAC/VLEC): 26 vessels, about US$2.36b
  • Bulk carriers: 46 vessels, about US$1.86b

The “2024 hangover” is real — but order momentum improved later in 2025

A key context point: order intake in 2025 is far lower than 2024, when shipowners rushed to lock in yard slots. The Business Times reported Yangzijiang had secured about US$2.2b of orders year-to-date as of Nov 17 — roughly one-fifth of the US$11.6b recorded in the same period a year earlier.

But the same report noted the company’s FY2025 orderbook target was US$6b, and highlighted how sharply Q1 slowed (US$300m of orders in Q1 2025 versus US$3.3b in Q1 2024).

Seatrade Maritime, covering Yangzijiang’s November update, similarly framed 2025 as a year of moderation then recovery: 50 newbuilding orders totalling US$2.17b, including 38 container ships, 10 bulk carriers, and two 40,000 cbm LPG carriers.


The 2025 storyline investors couldn’t ignore: a sanctions-linked contract termination — and what it signals

On 27 Sep 2025, Yangzijiang disclosed it terminated contracts for four 50,000 DWT MR oil tankers with an aggregate contract value of about US$180 million, after the buyer disclosed allegations tied to a scheme to circumvent US sanctions.

Two details mattered to the market:

  1. Financial impact looked contained (at least immediately). The company said no revenue or profit relating to the contracts had been recognised up to 30 Jun 2025, and that it had received a 10% deposit (US$18m); construction had begun for one vessel, for which an additional 10% instalment (US$4.48m) was collected.
  2. The episode spotlighted compliance risk — not just for Yangzijiang, but for any yard selling globally in an era where trade restrictions can mutate fast.

Crucially, Yangzijiang paired the “risk-off” headline with a “business-as-usual” counterpunch: on the same date, it announced eight additional shipbuilding contracts worth US$0.44b, taking year-to-date effective contracts to 44 worth US$1.90b. It also highlighted that two 11,800 TEU containerships were ordered by Seaspan, described as a long-standing partner. SGX Links


The late-summer order rebound: August and September contract updates

If you’re tracking the cadence of orders (which analysts absolutely do), Yangzijiang’s SGX filings show a clear late-summer pickup:

  • 29 Aug 2025: additional contracts for 22 vessels worth US$0.92b, with deliveries scheduled 2027–2029; year-to-date effective contracts reached 36 worth US$1.46b.
  • 27 Sep 2025: additional eight vessels worth US$0.44b; year-to-date effective contracts 44 worth US$1.90b.

Those filings also repeatedly stress a “lag effect” that’s easy to miss: because deliveries are mostly 2027–2029, these wins don’t materially move FY2025 earnings right away. They matter because they defend yard utilisation and pricing power into the next decade. SGX Links+1


Profit engine check: record first-half earnings and unusually strong margins

Yangzijiang’s 1H2025 results were the moment the market had to admit: this isn’t just an “orderbook story”; profitability has teeth.

The company reported net profit attributable to equity holders up 36.7% to about RMB 4.18b for the six months ended 30 Jun 2025, even as revenue dipped about 1.3% to roughly RMB 12.88b.

The company’s own release emphasized net profit up 37% to a record RMB 4.2b, and highlighted shipbuilding margin reaching a new high (with the published table showing gross profit margin 34.5% for 1H2025).

A major contributor to that earnings strength (besides contract pricing and lower steel costs) was the growing role of associates and JVs. The Straits Times reported contributions from associated companies and joint ventures rose 79% year-on-year to 481.4m yuan, including 320m yuan from Yangzi-Mitsui Shipbuilding and 160m yuan from Tsuneishi Zhoushan (in which Yangzijiang completed a capital injection for a 34% stake in 1Q2025).

The company also pointed to a robust orderbook of US$23.2b scheduled through 2029 and beyond at the half-year point.


The macro and policy overhang: US port fees and the “China-built ships” narrative

Shipbuilding is global, but 2025 reminded investors that shipping policy can hit shipbuilders through sentiment, financing, and buyer behavior.

In April, The Business Times reported Yangzijiang shares surged after the US watered down an initial proposal to slap fees on China-built ships, a policy shift that was interpreted as reducing downside risk for China-linked maritime names.

DBS research, in an April 2025 note, also referenced a scaling-back of the port-fee plan and argued it eased concerns about order cancellations or future ordering at Chinese shipyards (while noting Korea/Japan could still benefit from preference shifts).

Separately, Yangzijiang’s own half-year materials acknowledged shipbuilding contracting fell sharply in 1H2025 amid macro uncertainty and geopolitical tension, and referenced proposed US port fees as one factor influencing shipowners’ behavior — while also noting limited capacity outside China remains a constraint.


Analyst forecasts and price targets for Yangzijiang Shipbuilding stock (as of 21 Dec 2025)

Analyst targets are never gospel — they’re more like a structured argument with numbers attached. The key is to look for clusters and outliers.

1) SGX-sourced consensus target (widely cited locally)

Growbeansprout, citing SGX consensus data as of 21 Dec 2025, lists a consensus share price target of S$4.503. Against the current share price of S$3.37, that implies about 33.6% upside (based on that dataset).

2) Investing.com consensus: Strong Buy, ~S$3.80 average target

Investing.com shows (from 11 analysts) an average 12-month price target of about S$3.80, with a high estimate around S$4.52 and low around S$1.60; the platform labels the consensus rating as “Strong Buy.” Investing.com

Different vendor, different panel, different math — so it’s not surprising this consensus is lower than the SGX-sourced figure above.

3) Named broker targets (the ones Singapore investors track most)

SGInvestors’ compiled list of recent broker targets includes:

  • DBS Research:Buy, target S$3.80 (dated 02 Oct 2025)
  • UOB Kay Hian:Buy, target S$4.10 (dated 19 Nov 2025, raised from 3.60)
  • CGS International (CGSI):Add, target S$2.72 (dated 23 May 2025, lowered from 3.62)

That spread is telling: the “bull case” in mainstream coverage is still very much alive (UOB at 4.10), but at least one research house has been materially more cautious (CGSI at 2.72).

4) A notable caution flag: JPMorgan’s Singapore 2026 preferences

Even with supportive targets elsewhere, not every big institution is leaning in. The Business Times reported JPMorgan’s 2026 regional outlook named seven top Singapore picks — and listed Yangzijiang Shipbuilding among its least preferred Singapore stocks.

That kind of call can shape institutional positioning even if it doesn’t change company fundamentals overnight.


So… what’s the market really debating about Yangzijiang Shipbuilding stock?

Strip away the headlines and you end up with three big debates.

Debate 1: Is the order slowdown cyclical… or structural?

2025 order wins were dramatically below 2024 levels — by design, in a sense, because 2024 was a frenzy. The question investors ask is whether 2026–2027 will bring a fresh wave of fleet renewal orders driven by decarbonisation rules, or whether shipowners will pause as new capacity delivers.

Yangzijiang’s CEO commentary in November pointed to improved customer sentiment and a modest recovery in order momentum, while noting the industry backlog remains at historical highs and lead times stretch toward five years.

Debate 2: Are margins at a peak?

First-half margins were eye-catching. But margins in shipbuilding are a cocktail of contract pricing, execution, steel costs, and currency. Even in bullish research, FX and input costs remain highlighted sensitivities: DBS noted earnings sensitivity to USD moves and steel costs in its risk section.

Debate 3: How big is the geopolitical tail risk?

The September tanker contract termination didn’t look financially catastrophic, but it was a vivid reminder that sanctions and trade rules can hit “normal” commercial contracts. SGX Links

For a Singapore-listed group with major operations in China and a global customer base, that risk doesn’t vanish — it just gets repriced depending on the week’s headlines.


What to watch next: the 2026 checklist for Yangzijiang Shipbuilding investors

Based on the latest disclosures and analyst framing, these are the pressure points most likely to move the stock in early 2026:

Order intake pace vs the US$6b annual target logic.
Management flagged it is working to fill remaining 2029 delivery slots (largely small to mid-sized vessels). If order flow accelerates, valuation narratives usually improve fast.

Execution and deliveries.
By November, the company had delivered 46 vessels in 2025, hitting about 82% of its annual target of 56 deliveries.

Green-ship mix durability.
With clean-energy vessels at about 71% of backlog value, Yangzijiang is leaning into the decarbonisation-driven replacement cycle — but those ships can be more complex, so execution quality matters.

Capital returns (dividends and buybacks).
Yangzijiang has been viewed as shareholder-return friendly at points in the cycle. Simply Wall St listed an announced dividend of S$0.12 per share in 2025 (linked to FY2024), and discussed dividend yield levels and coverage metrics.
Separately, MarketScreener reported the company repurchased 11,000,000 shares (about 0.28%) for around S$22.99m under an April 2025 buyback plan.


The bottom line

As of 21 Dec 2025, the “base case” for Yangzijiang Shipbuilding stock is straightforward: a company with record profitability, a backlog near US$22.8b stretching to 2030, and a high proportion of clean-energy vessels that align with global fleet renewal trends. SGX Links+1

The “complication layer” — the part that makes the stock interesting (and occasionally stomach-churning) — is that shipbuilding is where macro cycles and geopolitics go to arm-wrestle. Contract wins can surge, then stall; policy proposals can appear, then dissolve; a single compliance shock can force contract terminations even when the shipyard has done due diligence. SGX Links+1

Analysts remain broadly constructive, with consensus targets depending on dataset ranging from around S$3.80 to S$4.503, while named broker targets span S$2.72 to S$4.10 — a wide band that basically screams: “execution and headlines will decide the next leg.” Investing.com+2Beansprout+2

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