Singapore Stocks’ Best Year Since 2017 Masks Downbeat Outlook

(Bloomberg) -- Singapore’s main stock index is on track to have its best annual performance since 2017, but any celebrations over the Straits Times Index’s 15% gain so far this year are likely to be overshadowed by doubts about what lies ahead.

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Even with the index hovering near its record high for weeks, investors say the bourse is a shadow of its former self, with delistings outnumbering new listings, the membership less diverse and prominent regional companies such as Grab Holdings Ltd. and Sea Ltd. going public elsewhere.

For traders who have lived through the boom-and-bust cycle of Singapore stocks, there’s a stark difference between the euphoria back on that record day in 2007 and the reality now.

“In 2007 we saw loads of liquidity. Basically everybody was talking about stocks,” said Terence Wong, chief executive officer at Azure Capital Pte., an investment firm he founded in 2015 after more than a decade on the sell-side. Now, “the Singapore market is just one of the many options that investors have. It is in a very sad state.”

Maybank Securities Pte.’s Thilan Wickramasinghe, who has worked through both stock market peaks, echoed those sentiments.

“There were a lot more listings coming in, a lot more capital,” said Wickramasinghe, who joined the brokerage industry two decades ago. “You could see the changes in Singapore almost on a monthly basis.”

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A deeper look at the STI’s gains this year suggests the rally is primarily driven by banks — with the trio of DBS Group Holdings Ltd., Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. Ltd. and United Overseas Bank Ltd. making up more than half of the benchmark’s weighting. That compares with less than 30% in early 2008 when the index was revamped to its current 30-member composition.

Another difference is the liquidity. Daily traded volumes in the city-state are far lower than other regional markets such as Australia and Thailand, Morgan Stanley analysts including Nick Lord wrote in a recent note. Nearly 90% of daily trades in Singapore can be attributed to just 30 of the largest stocks out of more than 600 listed firms on Singapore Exchange Ltd., and most of these volumes are less than $10 million a day.

Retail investors make up just 15% of the total turnover in Singapore, compared with 35% in India and 87% in China, according to a UBS Group AG report earlier this year.