Comprehensive Case Study, Outlook & Solutions Framework

Analysis Date: December 16, 2025


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The US market’s AI-driven tech selloff (Nasdaq -0.5%, Oracle -15%, Broadcom -11%) presents significant implications for Singapore’s export-oriented, tech-dependent economy. With electronics manufacturing contributing 6.1% to Q3 growth and the STI at 4,586 points (up 20.37% YoY), Singapore faces a critical inflection point as GDP growth forecasts moderate to 1.0-3.0% for 2026.

Key Risk: US AI capex slowdown → Singapore semiconductor supply chain contraction → earnings downgrades for tech suppliers

Key Opportunity: Defensive STI composition (banks, REITs, construction) provides buffer; rate cuts support yield plays


PART 1: CASE STUDY – SINGAPORE’S VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS

Case Background: The Tech Dependency Dilemma

Problem Statement: Singapore’s economic model relies heavily on:

  1. Electronics manufacturing (25% of manufacturing output)
  2. Global trade flows (goods trade = 320% of GDP)
  3. Financial services tied to regional capital flows
  4. Tech supply chain positioning (semiconductors, precision engineering)

Current Situation (December 2025):

  • STI near-term high: 4,586 points (December 12)
  • Electronics exports: Growing but AI-dependent
  • Core inflation: 2.5% (October), moderating toward 0.5-1.5% in 2026
  • MAS policy: Modest SGD appreciation stance maintained
  • GDP growth: ~4% (2025) → 1-3% forecast (2026)

The Catalyst Event: US AI Bubble Concerns

Timeline of Contagion:

December 11-13, 2025:

  • Oracle reports disappointing earnings, stock plunges 15%
  • Broadcom follows with weak guidance, drops 11%
  • Broader Nasdaq sells off on AI margin compression fears

December 16, 2025:

  • Continued tech pressure; ServiceNow -11% on M&A news
  • Gold approaches record highs ($4,340/oz) – safe haven bid
  • Bitcoin volatile, crypto stocks down 5-7%

Singapore Transmission Channels:

US AI Capex Slowdown
         ↓
Chip Orders Decline (Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom)
         ↓
Singapore Supply Chain Impact
    ↓              ↓              ↓
AEM Holdings   Venture Corp   Frencken Group
(Testing)      (Precision)    (Mechatronics)
         ↓
Manufacturing Output Contracts
         ↓
GDP Growth Slows + STI Tech Stocks Underperform

Quantitative Impact Assessment

Scenario 1: Mild AI Correction (40% probability)

  • US AI spending growth: +25% → +15% (2026)
  • Singapore electronics export impact: -2 to -3% growth
  • STI impact: -5% from current levels (target: 4,350-4,400)
  • GDP 2026: Upper end of 1-3% range (~2.5%)

Scenario 2: Moderate AI Recession (35% probability)

  • US AI spending: Flat to slight decline in H1 2026
  • Singapore electronics: -5 to -8% contraction
  • STI impact: -10% to -12% (target: 4,000-4,100)
  • GDP 2026: Mid-range (~2.0%)

Scenario 3: Severe Tech Downturn (25% probability)

  • US AI spending: -10% to -15% decline
  • Singapore electronics: -12% to -15% contraction
  • STI impact: -15% to -20% (target: 3,650-3,850)
  • GDP 2026: Lower bound (1.0-1.5%)
  • Risk: MAS forced to ease policy aggressively

Real Company Examples (Singapore-Listed)

1. AEM Holdings (AEM.SI)

  • Business: Semiconductor test equipment
  • Exposure: 100% to chip industry capex
  • Risk Profile: CRITICAL
  • Current Status: Share price vulnerable to any chip spending cuts
  • 2026 Outlook: Earnings could contract 15-25% if AI capex slows

2. Venture Corporation (VMS.SI)

  • Business: Electronics manufacturing services
  • Exposure: 60% tech, 40% diversified (medical, lifestyle)
  • Risk Profile: HIGH
  • Mitigation: Diversified end markets provide cushion
  • 2026 Outlook: Flat to low single-digit growth

3. DBS Group (DBS.SI)

  • Business: Banking, financial services
  • Exposure: Indirect (regional economic activity)
  • Risk Profile: MODERATE
  • Support: Strong capital position, 5%+ ROE
  • 2026 Outlook: NIM pressure but stable dividends

4. Ascendas REIT (AREIT.SI)

  • Business: Industrial & data center properties
  • Exposure: Tech tenant demand + interest rate sensitivity
  • Risk Profile: MODERATE
  • Support: Data center demand remains strong; rate cuts help
  • 2026 Outlook: Distribution yield 5.5-6%, stable occupancy

PART 2: OUTLOOK ANALYSIS

2026 Singapore Economic Forecast

GDP Growth Breakdown (MTI/MAS Consensus)

Sector2025A2026FKey Drivers
Manufacturing5.2%1.0-2.0%Electronics slowdown, pharma steady
Electronics8.1%-2% to +3%AI capex dependency
Precision Engineering4.3%2-4%Diversified end markets
Construction4.8%6.0%Govt infrastructure, HDB ramping
Finance & Insurance6.2%4-5%Wealth management growth
Wholesale Trade3.1%1-3%Trade flow normalization
Retail2.8%1-2%Consumer caution
Overall GDP~4.0%1.0-3.0%Tariff impact, tech cycle

STI Target Ranges (End-2026)

Base Case (60% probability): 4,700-4,880

  • Earnings growth: 8-9% (DBS forecast)
  • P/E compression: 12.5x → 12.2x (mild)
  • Drivers: Banks steady, REITs recover, construction strong
  • Return from current: +2% to +6%

Bear Case (25% probability): 4,000-4,200

  • Earnings contraction: -5% to flat
  • P/E compression: 12.5x → 11.0x (severe risk-off)
  • Triggers: Severe US recession, tariff escalation, tech crash
  • Return from current: -8% to -13%

Bull Case (15% probability): 5,200-5,400

  • Earnings surge: 12-15%
  • P/E expansion: 12.5x → 13.5x (risk-on)
  • Catalysts: AI boom resumes, aggressive Fed cuts, China stimulus
  • Return from current: +13% to +18%

Key Risk Factors

Macro Risks (External)

  1. US Tariff Policy (HIGH impact)
    • Trump administration implementing selective tariffs
    • Singapore’s trade-to-GDP ratio (320%) creates vulnerability
    • Estimated impact: -0.5% to -1.0% GDP if full tariff regime
  2. China Economic Slowdown (MEDIUM-HIGH impact)
    • China = 15% of Singapore’s exports
    • Property sector stress continues
    • Mitigation: China stimulus measures gaining traction
  3. Geopolitical Tensions (MEDIUM impact)
    • US-China tech decoupling
    • Supply chain bifurcation
    • Singapore positioned as neutral hub (opportunity)
  4. Global Recession (LOW-MEDIUM probability)
    • PMI indicators mixed globally
    • US labor market cooling but not collapsing
    • Europe stagnant, Asia relatively resilient

Domestic Risks (Internal)

  1. Electronics Cycle Downturn (HIGH impact)
    • Already discussed; primary concern
    • Correlation to global chip cycle: 0.85+
  2. Property Market Cooling (MEDIUM impact)
    • Residential prices flat to down 5% in 2026
    • Commercial office vacancy rising (WFH structural)
    • Retail REITs under tenant pressure
  3. Inflation Persistence (LOW risk)
    • Core inflation moderating as expected
    • MAS policy effective; SGD strength helps
  4. Labor Market Softening (LOW-MEDIUM risk)
    • Unemployment still low (~2.0%)
    • But tech sector layoffs possible if downturn deepens

Singapore-Specific Advantages

Structural Strengths:

  1. Fiscal Firepower
    • Government reserves substantial
    • Budget 2026 (February) likely includes support measures
    • Precedent: COVID response, cost-of-living packages
  2. MAS Policy Flexibility
    • Can adjust SGD policy stance if needed
    • Rate-sensitive sectors (REITs) benefit from dovish pivot
    • Currently: Modest appreciation; could shift to neutral
  3. Diversification Efforts
    • Beyond electronics: Aerospace, marine, pharmaceuticals
    • Financial hub status intact
    • Green economy initiatives (carbon services, sustainability)
  4. Infrastructure Pipeline
    • $60B+ in govt projects (transport, housing, climate)
    • Construction sector growth supports STI industrials
    • Employment buffer for displaced tech workers

PART 3: SOLUTION FRAMEWORKS

Strategic Solutions for Different Stakeholder Groups


🏦 SOLUTION A: FOR INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS

Portfolio Rebalancing Strategy

Phase 1: Immediate (December 2025 – January 2026)

REDUCE / UNDERWEIGHT:

  1. Singapore Tech Supply Chain (AEM, Venture, Frencken)
    • Target weight: 5% → 2% of Singapore allocation
    • Rationale: Direct AI capex exposure too risky
  2. Leveraged REITs (Gearing >45%)
    • Reduce by 30% of current position
    • Focus: Those with 2025-2026 refinancing
  3. Premium Consumer Discretionary
    • Hotels, luxury retail
    • Consumer caution increasing

MAINTAIN / NEUTRAL:

  1. Singapore Banks (DBS, OCBC, UOB)
    • Current weight: 25-30% (appropriate for STI tracking)
    • Selective overweight on DBS (strongest regional franchise)
  2. Diversified Industrials (ST Engineering, Sembcorp)
    • Defense, energy transition themes intact

INCREASE / OVERWEIGHT:

  1. Construction-Related (+5% allocation)
    • Yongnam Holdings, CSE Global
    • Infrastructure boom cycle just beginning
  2. Quality REITs (+3% allocation)
    • Data centers: Mapletree Logistics Trust
    • Industrial: Ascendas REIT, MIT
    • Target: 6%+ distribution yields
  3. Healthcare/Pharma (+2% allocation)
    • Raffles Medical Group
    • Defensive characteristics

Phase 2: Tactical (Q1-Q2 2026)

Monitor for entry points if tech selloff creates value:

  • AEM Holdings: Consider below S$1.50 (currently ~S$2.80)
  • Venture Corp: Watch for <S$12 (currently ~S$15)
  • Trigger: Stabilization in US semiconductor orders

Risk Management Framework

Portfolio Risk Budget Allocation (100 basis points):

Current State:
- Tech exposure: 40 bps (HIGH - REDUCE TO 15 bps)
- Rate risk: 25 bps (MODERATE - acceptable)
- China exposure: 20 bps (MODERATE - hedge with diversification)
- Singapore domestic: 15 bps (LOW - increase to 25 bps)

Target State (2026):
- Tech exposure: 15 bps
- Rate risk: 20 bps (REITs benefit from cuts)
- Construction/Infrastructure: 25 bps (NEW)
- Singapore domestic: 30 bps
- Cash/optionality: 10 bps

Hedging Strategies

  1. Index Options
    • Buy STI put options (4,200 strike, Jun 2026)
    • Cost: ~1.5% of portfolio
    • Protects against -10% to -15% downside
  2. Currency Hedge
    • If expecting MAS to ease: Long USD/SGD calls
    • If STI downside: SGD typically strengthens (safe haven)
  3. Sector Rotation Triggers
    • IF US PMI < 48 for 2 consecutive months → Exit all discretionary tech
    • IF Fed cuts 3+ times in H1 → Add REITs aggressively
    • IF China stimulus >5 trillion RMB → Add China-linked Singapore stocks

💼 SOLUTION B: FOR RETAIL INVESTORS / CPFIS

Simple 3-Portfolio Strategy

Portfolio 1: DEFENSIVE (60% allocation) Goal: Capital preservation + 4-5% annual yield

Stock/ETFWeightRationaleTarget Yield
DBS Group20%Strongest SG bank, regional exposure5.0%
OCBC Bank15%Conservative, strong capital4.8%
Ascendas REIT10%Industrial demand stable5.8%
Mapletree Logistics10%E-commerce tailwind5.5%
Singapore Savings Bond5%Risk-free, government backed3.0%

Expected Return: 4-6% annually Risk Level: Low to Moderate Best For: Retirees, conservative investors, CPFIS prioritizing safety


Portfolio 2: BALANCED (30% allocation) Goal: 6-8% annual return with moderate risk

Stock/ETFWeightRationaleExpected Return
ST Engineering8%Defense, aviation recovery8-10%
Sembcorp Industries7%Energy transition play10-12%
CapitaLand IntCom Trust5%Prime retail/office6-8%
Sheng Siong Group5%Defensive consumer staples5-7%
Venture Corporation5%WAIT for tech bottom, then buy15%+ potential

Expected Return: 7-9% annually Risk Level: Moderate Best For: Working professionals, 10-15 year horizon


Portfolio 3: OPPORTUNISTIC (10% allocation) Goal: 15%+ upside if thesis plays out

PositionWeightEntry TriggerTarget Return
AEM Holdings3%Wait for <S$1.8030-40%
China-SG plays3%China GDP >5% confirm20-30%
Small-cap construction2%Infrastructure contracts announced25%+
Tech bounce basket2%Nasdaq stabilizes >16,00020%+

Expected Return: Highly variable (-20% to +40%) Risk Level: High Best For: Risk capital only, max 10% of total portfolio


Action Plan for Retail Investors

DECEMBER 2025 (This Week):

  • Review current portfolio allocation
  • If >20% in tech stocks → Reduce to 10-15%
  • Ensure minimum 50% in defensive (banks + quality REITs)
  • Set aside 10-15% cash for opportunities

JANUARY 2026:

  • Monitor US employment data impact (December 17 release)
  • Watch for Singapore Budget 2026 announcements
  • Review CPFIS allocation (shift toward bonds if tech worsens)

Q1 2026:

  • Rebalance when STI moves >5% from target weights
  • Add construction/infrastructure names on weakness
  • Build shopping list for tech stocks at discount levels

Q2-Q4 2026:

  • Quarterly portfolio review
  • Collect dividends (reinvest in underweight sectors)
  • Adjust based on GDP and corporate earnings trends

🏢 SOLUTION C: FOR SINGAPORE SMES & CORPORATES

Business Strategy Adjustments

For Electronics/Tech Supply Chain Companies:

  1. Diversify Customer Base (Priority 1)
    • Reduce concentration in AI/hyperscale customers
    • Target: Automotive (EV), industrial automation, aerospace
    • Timeline: 12-18 months to onboard new customers
  2. Geographic Expansion (Priority 2)
    • Beyond US: Europe, Japan, India markets
    • Consider Malaysia/Vietnam manufacturing footprint
    • Leverage Singapore as HQ/IP hub
  3. Cost Management (Immediate)
    • Variable cost structure: Contract manufacturing, flex workforce
    • Negotiate longer payment terms with suppliers
    • Cash preservation: Delay capex, focus on ROI >20%
  4. Innovation Pipeline (Medium-term)
    • AI applications beyond training/inference (edge AI, embedded)
    • Sustainability tech (green data centers, energy efficiency)
    • Apply for government grants (EDB, ESG)

For Professional Services (Legal, Accounting, Consulting):

  1. M&A Advisory Surge
    • Tech company distress = consolidation opportunities
    • Position for restructuring/turnaround work
  2. ESG/Sustainability Practice
    • Singapore Green Plan 2030 mandate
    • Carbon services, climate risk assessment growing

For Retail/F&B:

  1. Margin Protection
    • Renegotiate rents if footfall declining (leverage weak office demand)
    • Menu engineering: Optimize high-margin items
  2. Experience Economy
    • Event-driven dining, collaborations
    • Tourism recovery continues (17M visitors target 2026)

Financial Risk Management for SMEs

Cash Flow Optimization:

Month 1-3 (Immediate):
→ Accelerate receivables (offer 2-5% early payment discount)
→ Extend payables to 60 days (negotiate with suppliers)
→ Draw down credit lines proactively (secure liquidity)

Month 4-6:
→ Inventory reduction (tech components especially)
→ Sale-leaseback of equipment (if needed for cash)
→ Government support: Apply for ESG, productivity grants

Month 7-12:
→ Refinance debt at lower rates (if Fed/MAS cut)
→ Evaluate M&A opportunities (distressed competitors)
→ Build 6-month cash buffer minimum

Hiring Freeze Protocol:

  • Pause all non-essential hiring
  • Prioritize: Sales, high-ROI technical roles only
  • Consider: Part-time, project-based vs full-time

Capex Discipline:

  • Threshold: Only approve projects with <18 month payback
  • Prioritize: Automation, cost reduction over expansion
  • Defer: Facilities upgrades, “nice to have” technology

PART 4: EXTENDED SOLUTIONS

Advanced Strategies for Sophisticated Investors


🎯 EXTENDED SOLUTION 1: DERIVATIVES & STRUCTURED PRODUCTS

A. Equity Structured Notes

Product: DBS Dual Currency Investment (DCI) on STI

  • Structure: Sell SGD, receive higher yield if STI stays above strike
  • Scenario: STI at 4,586; sell 4,400 put (3-month)
  • Premium: 5-7% annualized
  • Risk: If STI <4,400 at maturity, receive SGD at strike
  • Best for: Investors willing to accumulate STI at -4% discount with income

Product: Accumulator on DBS/OCBC

  • Structure: Obligation to buy at strike if price falls
  • Example: DBS at S$41; accumulator strike S$38
  • Premium received: 12-15% annualized
  • Risk: Forced buying if market crashes
  • Best for: Long-term bank bulls wanting to dollar-cost-average

B. Options Strategies

Strategy 1: Covered Call Writing

Position: Long 10,000 DBS shares @ S$41
Action: Sell 10 call contracts (S$44 strike, Mar 2026)
Premium: S$0.60/share = S$6,000
Outcome: 
- If DBS <$44: Keep premium + dividends = 7%+ yield
- If DBS >$44: Shares called away at $44 = 7.3% gain + premium

Strategy 2: Bull Put Spread (Defined Risk)

Target: Ascendas REIT (expecting stable to up)
Action: 
- Sell put S$2.80 (receive S$0.12)
- Buy put S$2.60 (pay S$0.06)
Net Credit: S$0.06/share
Max Profit: S$0.06 (if >S$2.80 at expiry)
Max Loss: S$0.14 (if <S$2.60)
Risk/Reward: 2.3:1

Strategy 3: Iron Condor on STI ETF (ES3)

Sell: 3,400 put + 3,600 call
Buy: 3,350 put + 3,650 call
Net Credit: S$20 per spread
Range: STI needs to stay 3,400-3,600 (±4% range)
Max Profit: S$20
Max Loss: S$30
Probability of Profit: 65-70%

C. Index Futures for Hedging

Scenario: $500K SGD equity portfolio, 80% STI-correlated

Hedge Calculation:

Portfolio Value: $500,000
Beta to STI: 0.80
STI current: 4,586

Hedge Ratio = (500,000 × 0.80) / (4,586 × $10 multiplier)
            = 400,000 / 45,860
            = 8.7 contracts → Round to 9 contracts

Action: Sell 9 STI Futures (Mar 2026)
Cost: Margin ~$3,000/contract = $27,000 total
Protection: If STI -10%, portfolio -8%, futures gain +10% × 9 contracts

Dynamic Hedging Protocol:

  • STI -3%: Hedge 30% of portfolio
  • STI -5%: Hedge 50% of portfolio
  • STI -8%: Hedge 75% of portfolio
  • STI -10%: Full hedge + consider buying dip

🎯 EXTENDED SOLUTION 2: SECTORAL DEEP DIVES

A. Construction Sector – Multi-Year Boom Positioning

Thesis: 6% growth in 2026, 4-5% in 2027-2028; government infrastructure cycle

Key Projects Pipeline (Public Domain):

  • MRT: Jurong Region Line, Cross Island Line extensions
  • HDB: 100,000 flats target (2021-2025 extended)
  • Changi Airport Terminal 5: Design/construction phasing
  • Tuas Port: Ongoing expansion
  • Climate adaptation: Coastal defense, drainage upgrades

Stock Selection Matrix:

CompanyMarket CapSpecialization2026E GrowthRisk
Yongnam HoldingsS$150MStructural steel15-20%High beta
Ley Choon GroupS$80MCivil engineering10-15%Moderate
Hock Lian SengS$180MConstruction, property8-12%Property risk
CSE GlobalS$400MInfrastructure tech12-15%Tech crossover

Investment Strategy:

  1. Core holding (60%): CSE Global – Most liquid, tech-infrastructure hybrid
  2. Value play (25%): Yongnam – Undervalued, steel structure for MRT/ports
  3. Special situation (15%): Ley Choon – Turnaround story, civil contracts

Catalysts to Watch:

  • Budget 2026 (Feb): Additional infrastructure announcements
  • LTA contract awards (quarterly)
  • HDB construction tenders
  • Tuas Port Phase 3-4 commencement

Exit Triggers:

  • Government signals capex slowdown (unlikely before 2028)
  • Company margin compression <8% (cost overruns)
  • Overall STI -15%+ (systemic risk)

B. Data Center / Digital Infrastructure Play

Thesis: AI training/inference needs massive compute; Singapore DC hub

Singapore Advantages:

  • Submarine cable hub (Asia-Pacific connectivity)
  • Political stability, strong IP protection
  • Green energy push (solar, regional power imports)
  • Government support (Digital Connectivity Blueprint)

Challenge: Moratorium on new data centers (energy constraints)

  • BUT: Existing operators can expand within current sites
  • AND: Energy-efficient designs (liquid cooling, renewable) getting approved

Investment Options:

Option 1: Ascendas REIT (20% data center exposure)

  • Tenants: Equinix, Digital Realty, local hyperscalers
  • Lease duration: 10-15 years (very sticky)
  • Distribution yield: 5.8%
  • Upside: Rental reversion 5-8% on renewals
  • Risk: Interest rate sensitivity

Option 2: Keppel DC REIT

  • Pure-play data center REIT
  • Geographic: Singapore, Europe, Asia markets
  • Yield: 6.2%
  • Upside: M&A potential (Keppel consolidation strategy)
  • Risk: Oversupply in some markets (Europe)

Option 3: ST Engineering (Indirect)

  • Provides cooling, power infrastructure for DCs
  • Diversified revenue (not pure play)
  • Benefit: Defense, aerospace also strong
  • Risk: Lower leverage to DC theme

Allocation Recommendation:

  • 50% Ascendas (quality, diversification)
  • 30% Keppel DC (pure play, higher yield)
  • 20% ST Engineering (diversified industrials hedge)

C. Green Economy / Sustainability Positioning

Singapore Government Targets:

  • Carbon tax: S$25/ton (2024-2025) → S$45/ton (2026-2027) → S$80/ton (2030)
  • Green Finance: S$100B+ sustainable finance target
  • Solar: 2 GWp by 2030 (from 0.7 GWp today)

Investment Themes:

Theme 1: Carbon Services / Exchanges

  • Play: Singapore Exchange (SGX) – Carbon credits trading
  • Catalyst: COP climate agreements, corporate net-zero mandates
  • Timeline: 3-5 years to meaningful revenue

Theme 2: Renewable Energy

  • Play: Sembcorp Industries
    • Renewable capacity: 13.2 GW by 2028 (from 10 GW)
    • Singapore gas power + regional renewables
    • Dividend: 4.5% yield
  • Risk: Energy transition execution, coal phase-out

Theme 3: Green Building / Efficiency

  • Play: Boustead Singapore
    • Eco-smart facilities, energy-efficient design
    • Small cap, volatile
    • Thematic exposure

Theme 4: Electric Vehicles / Charging

  • Play: ComfortDelGro (indirect)
    • Converting bus fleet to electric
    • Charging infrastructure buildout
    • Defensive transport operator + EV optionality

Portfolio Construction:

Green Economy Basket (S$100K example):

Core (70%):
- Sembcorp Industries: S$40K (clean energy leader)
- SGX: S$20K (carbon trading infrastructure)
- ComfortDelGro: S$10K (EV transport)

Satellite (20%):
- ESG-focused ETF: S$20K (diversified exposure)

Opportunistic (10%):
- Small-cap green tech: S$10K (Boustead, others)

🎯 EXTENDED SOLUTION 3: MACROECONOMIC SCENARIO PLAYBOOKS

Scenario Planning Framework

Scenario A: “Goldilocks” (35% probability)

Characteristics:

  • US: Soft landing achieved, AI spending stabilizes at +10% growth
  • China: Stimulus works, GDP 4.5-5.0%
  • Singapore: GDP 2.5-3.0%, inflation 1.5%
  • Fed: 2-3 cuts in 2026, terminal rate 3.75-4.00%
  • STI: 4,800-5,000

Portfolio Positioning:

  • Overweight: Cyclicals (banks, construction, industrials)
  • Neutral: REITs (moderate rate cuts)
  • Underweight: Defensives (healthcare, utilities)

Action Items:

  • Add leverage: Margin up to 1.3x
  • Tech: Selectively buy dips in quality names
  • China exposure: 15-20% via Singapore-listed plays

Monitoring Indicators:

  • US PMI >50 sustained
  • Singapore PMI >50.5
  • STI earnings revisions turn positive

Scenario B: “Stagflation Lite” (25% probability)

Characteristics:

  • US: Growth slows but inflation sticky (3-3.5%)
  • Fed: Only 0-1 cut, terminal rate 4.25-4.50%
  • Singapore: GDP 1.0-1.5%, inflation 2.0%
  • Oil: $65-75/barrel (moderate pressure)
  • STI: 4,200-4,400

Portfolio Positioning:

  • Overweight: Real assets (REITs, commodities, gold)
  • Neutral: Banks (NIM stable but growth weak)
  • Underweight: Long-duration growth (tech, small caps)

Action Items:

  • Reduce portfolio duration: Sell bonds, buy T-bills
  • Gold allocation: 5-10% (inflation hedge)
  • REITs: Focus on short-lease, rent-revision upside
  • Reduce margin: Max 1.1x leverage

Monitoring Indicators:

  • US Core PCE persistently >3%
  • Fed rhetoric turns hawkish
  • Singapore wage growth >4%

Scenario C: “Tech Winter / Recession” (20% probability)

Characteristics:

  • US: Recession (2 consecutive quarters negative GDP)
  • AI bubble bursts: Capex -15% to -25%
  • Singapore: GDP 0.5-1.0%, possible technical recession
  • Fed: Emergency cuts, terminal rate 3.00-3.25%
  • STI: 3,600-4,000

Portfolio Positioning:

  • Overweight: Cash (20%+), government bonds, gold
  • Neutral: Singapore banks (defensive but not immune)
  • Underweight: Everything cyclical (tech, construction, discretionary)

Action Items:

  • Deleverage completely: No margin
  • Defensive REITs only: Healthcare, self-storage
  • Short-duration bonds: <3 year maturity
  • Prepare shopping list: Buy tech at -30-40% discounts

Monitoring Indicators:

  • US unemployment >4.5%
  • S&P 500 breaks 5,000 support
  • Singapore exports contract 3+ consecutive months