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Sunday, October 19th, 2025

AI-Fueled Rally Pauses: Earnings Wave, Gold Streak, and Crypto Jitters Set the Stage

AI-Fueled Rally Pauses: Earnings Wave, Gold Streak, and Crypto Jitters Set the Stage

A fast, reporter-style wrap with each item tagged by its tradable proxy/symbol.

SGX:S27.SI:S&P 500The index chopped in a tight, week-long range after a 2.7% drop last Friday, crisscrossing the 6,667 area and hovering near its 50-day average (~6,564), leaving a five-week sideways pattern intact.
US:QQQ:Nasdaq CompositeTech-led enthusiasm helped markets notch a winning week despite volatility and speculative pockets cooling.
US:DGT:Dow Jones Industrial AverageAll three major U.S. averages posted weekly gains, with most of the S&P 500’s rebound coming Monday.
US:BTC:BitcoinBitcoin failed to rebound from last week’s liquidation wave and sits near its post-2024-election highs and 200-day moving average, signaling softer risk appetite.
US:GLD:SPDR Gold SharesGold’s nine-week winning streak became a concern as stocks, yields, the dollar, and oil fell; a >1% pullback Friday eased nerves, with heavy GLD volumes highlighting momentum-driven flows.
US:UCO:OilOil slid alongside broader risk assets during the week before stocks stabilized into the close.

US:AXP:American ExpressStronger results and big-bank CEO reassurances helped calm jitters around regional-bank stress late in the week.
US:BAC:Bank of AmericaHigh-net-worth clients’ equity allocations climbed to 64%, near two-decade highs, implying less incremental demand even as markets consolidate.
US:GS:Goldman SachsPrime-brokerage data showed the largest hedge-fund selling of U.S. and global equities since April, as fast-money players de-risked.
US:JEF:Jefferies FinancialPressure on alternative asset managers, regional banks, and Jefferies fed credit-cycle unease despite tight corporate-debt spreads.

US:IONQ:IonQQuantum-themed high-beta names cooled, with IonQ dropping more than 20% over two sessions after a powerful rally.
US:RGTI:Rigetti ComputingRigetti also slid more than 20% in two days as speculative fervor faded.
US:HOOD:RobinhoodRobinhood fell roughly 15% across six sessions, underscoring pressure in speculative retail-favored trades.

US:TSM:Taiwan SemiconductorSolid results met a muted stock response, a caution flag for follow-through during choppier tape.
US:ORCL:OracleOptimistic growth outlook likewise saw a restrained reaction, reflecting a market re-rating pause.

US:NEM:NewmontReports 10/23; 26 upward EPS revisions in three months and a 21% EPS estimate lift; analysts (including UBS) stay constructive even after a sharp Friday pullback with gold.
US:APH:AmphenolReports 10/22; 21 upward EPS revisions; Bank of America upgrade and higher target reflect AI rack volume, data-center buildout, and M&A tailwinds.
US:LRCX:Lam ResearchReports 10/22; 29 upward EPS revisions and sizable price-target hikes as AI hardware demand bolsters momentum.
US:VLO:Valero EnergyReports 10/23; part of the screen of stocks with positive estimate and target revisions heading into prints.
US:GL:Globe LifeReports 10/22; double-digit estimate and target revisions place it among names with improving earnings setup.

US:FDS:FactSetData show Q3 S&P 500 earnings poised to exceed 13% growth if typical beats materialize, extending a run of double-digit profit gains.
US:UBS:UBS GroupUBS reiterated a buy on Newmont, citing improving returns and buybacks supporting the operational narrative.
US:VRTS:Virtus Investment PartnersStrategist Joe Terranova continued to favor Newmont as gold acts as a portfolio diversifier amid volatility.

US:STLD:Steel DynamicsReports Monday, Oct. 20.
US:EQT:EQTReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:COF:Capital One FinancialReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:TXN:Texas InstrumentsReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:NFLX:NetflixReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:PM:Philip Morris InternationalReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:NDAQ:NasdaqReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:KO:Coca-ColaReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:HAL:HalliburtonReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:PHM:PulteGroupReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:MMM:3MReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:GM:General MotorsReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:EFX:EquifaxReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:ELV:Elevance HealthReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:DHR:DanaherReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:RTX:RTXReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:NOC:Northrop GrummanReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:LMT:Lockheed MartinReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:GE:GE AerospaceReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:DGX:Quest DiagnosticsReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:ISRG:Intuitive SurgicalReports Tuesday, Oct. 21.
US:ORLY:O’Reilly AutomotiveReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:IBM:International Business MachinesReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:LVS:Las Vegas SandsReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:KMI:Kinder MorganReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:URI:United RentalsReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:TSLA:TeslaReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:RJF:Raymond James FinancialReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:PKG:Packaging Corporation of AmericaReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:FE:FirstEnergyReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:CME:CME GroupReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:BSX:Boston ScientificReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:TMO:Thermo Fisher ScientificReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:HLT:Hilton Worldwide HoldingsReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:T:AT&TReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:GEV:GE VernovaReports Wednesday, Oct. 22.
US:BKR:Baker HughesReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:F:Ford MotorReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:DLR:Digital Realty TrustReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:DECK:Deckers OutdoorReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:INTC:IntelReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:NSC:Norfolk SouthernReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:PEAK:Healthpeak PropertiesReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:UNP:Union PacificReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:TMUS:T-Mobile USReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:HAS:HasbroReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:HON:Honeywell InternationalReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:TSCO:Tractor SupplyReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:PCG:PG&EReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:FCX:Freeport-McMoRanReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:BX:BlackstoneReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:LUV:Southwest AirlinesReports Thursday, Oct. 23.
US:GD:General DynamicsReports Friday, Oct. 24.
US:PG:Procter & GambleReports Friday, Oct. 24.

SGX:S27.SI:S&P 500With a government data blackout still in effect, investors eye Friday’s CPI; consensus expects headline ~3.1% y/y and a likely quarter-point Fed cut Oct. 28–29 barring a markedly hot print.

AI Buzz Meets Hong Kong Heat: Alibaba’s HK HQ Move, Hang Seng Rebound Call, and Bank Shuffle Headline a Volatile Week

Reporter-style wrap. One symbol → one news. Short, no tables, all companies named.

HongKong:3115.HK:Hangseng IndexHKADR indicates the HSI may open up 580 points to 25,828 on Monday.
HK:09988.HK:Alibaba Group HoldingAlibaba and Ant Group will invest ~HKD7.2B to acquire multiple floors in One Causeway Bay as their Hong Kong headquarters, in an agreement with Mandarin Oriental International.
SGX:M04.SI:Mandarin Oriental InternationalAgreed to sell multiple floors in One Causeway Bay to Alibaba and Ant Group for their new Hong Kong headquarters (deal value ~HKD7.2B).
HK:01929.HK:Chow Tai Fook JewelleryQuarter ended 30 Sept 2025: retail sales value grew 4.1% YoY; Mainland China SSS turned positive (self-operated +7.6%, franchised +8.6%).
HK:00011.HK:Hang Seng BankLuanne Lim will assume the role of Chief Executive next Monday.
US:UBS:UBS GroupResearch note says the gold trade is not “extremely crowded,” with de-dollarization/debasement themes supporting gold allocation demand.
HK:03690.HK:MeituanFull-day takeaway: shares fell over 4% amid a broad Hong Kong tech selloff.
HK:09988.HK:Alibaba Group HoldingFull-day takeaway: shares dropped over 4% as HSI and HSTI weakened into the close.
HK:01810.HK:XiaomiFull-day takeaway: shares declined over 3% alongside broader market losses.
HK:03690.HK:MeituanCompany says customers increasingly seek “super value for money,” adding that AI can help restaurants improve operational decisions.
HK:01810.HK:XiaomiAssisted car owners affected by cyberattacks, with 480 people providing evidence.
US:DGT:Dow Jones Industrial AverageFutures dropped more than 450 points; Hong Kong’s HSI at one point plunged over 700 points to test its 100-day moving average.
US:HSBC:HSBC HoldingsADR snapshot within HKADR basket showed a ~1.43% discount versus Hong Kong pricing during the session referenced.

AI, Chips & China Pulse: Hong Kong Tech Slumps, Broker Calls Fly, and EV Supply Chains Shuffle

Reporter-style wrap. One symbol → one news. Short, no tables. All companies named with market-coded symbols.

HongKong:3115.HK:Hangseng IndexHSI losses steepened past 600 points as handset and telecom-equipment names dragged the market lower.
HK:0763.HK:ZTEZTE plunged about 13% amid sector-wide pressure on telecom-equipment stocks.
HK:0981.HK:Semiconductor Manufacturing InternationalSMIC slipped over 6% during the selloff impacting chip and handset supply chains.
HK:1347.HK:Hua Hong SemiconductorHua Hong fell more than 6% alongside broader semiconductor weakness.
US:MU:Micron TechnologyMicron was rumored to plan halting server-chip supply to China data centers.
HK:00027.HK:Galaxy Entertainment GroupGalaxy Entertainment renewed a three-year strategic partnership with Damai Entertainment and Macau Pass.
HK:09956.HK:ANE (Cayman) Inc.ANE tumbled roughly 17% after trading resumed, with the board still weighing a consortium’s privatization proposal.
HK:0700.HK:TencentBOCI research suggested a defensive stance on China internet and named Tencent as its top pick.
HK:03690.HK:MeituanMeituan’s VP said catering is entering a deep reshuffle, with quality dining seen as the industry foundation.
HK:03690.HK:MeituanCiti projected a Q3 adjusted loss of RMB16.3B and cut its target price to HKD117 with a Neutral rating.
HK:1044.HK:Hengan International GroupHengan hit a new high during midday trade despite overall market weakness.
HK:9997.HK:Kangji MedicalKangji Medical also marked a new high in a mixed healthcare tape.
HK:01211.HK:BYD CompanyMacquarie reiterated preference for H-shares and cited BYD among favored names.
HK:02020.HK:ANTA SportsMacquarie listed ANTA Sports among its preferred Hong Kong stocks.
HK:06862.HK:Haidilao InternationalHaidilao was highlighted by Macquarie in a select basket of favored H-shares.
HK:00005.HK:HSBC HoldingsPaul Chan said an HSBC privatization of Hang Seng Bank would not lead to layoffs; multiple broker previews flagged a potential 5% drop in HSBC’s Q3 pre-tax profit with focus on strategy and shareholder returns.
HK:00011.HK:Hang Seng BankHang Seng Bank featured in privatization discussion headlines tied to HSBC, with authorities downplaying job-cut risks.
HK:03931.HK:CALB GroupReports said some Huawei Luxeed models switched to CATL batteries amid insufficient CALB battery-cell output.
US:CATL:Contemporary Amperex TechnologyCATL was cited as gaining supply share in certain Huawei Luxeed models, according to wire reports.
HK:06823.HK:HKT Trust and HKT Ltd.UBS saw limited earnings impact even if HKT’s U.S. business license were revoked; the Hong Kong government criticized the U.S. plan.
HK:02328.HK:PICC Property & CasualtyPICC P&C rose over 2% after flagging up to 60% profit growth for 1–3Q; Citi and UBS lifted targets with Buy ratings ahead of Q3.
HK:1209.HK:China Resources Mixc LifestyleUBS upgraded China Resources Mixc to Buy, seeing catalysts ahead for the property-services operator.
HK:01997.HK:Wharf Real Estate Investment CompanyUBS viewed Wharf REIC as a short-term beneficiary of a recovering luxury segment.
HK:06618.HK:JD HealthMacquarie raised JD Health’s target to HKD74.57, expecting a stable Q3 performance.
US:TSM:Taiwan SemiconductorCiti raised TSMC’s target to TWD1,800 and kept Buy; Nomura lifted its target to TWD1,855 and raised earnings/margins; Goldman Sachs also raised earnings forecasts, expecting AI revenue to outgrow the broader market.
US:NMR:Nomura HoldingsNomura boosted TSMC estimates and target alongside sector-wide AI optimism.
US:MS:Morgan StanleyMorgan Stanley kept Overweight on BYD, projecting ~90% surge in 2026 overseas sales.
US:UBS:UBS GroupUBS reportedly intensified reviews of Singapore/Hong Kong clients’ fund sources; separately, UBS expected catalysts for Pop Mart and upgraded Laopu Gold to Buy.
HK:09992.HK:Pop MartUBS said catalysts are expected to emerge and maintained a Buy view.
HK:02015.HK:Li AutoLi Auto established an overseas headquarters in Hong Kong and plans to expand its local presence.
HK:06886.HK:Huatai SecuritiesHuatai (HTSC) said demand for Pop Mart’s new products is hot in peak season, with platform momentum continuing.
US:JPM:JPMorgan ChaseJPMorgan was reported negotiating a lease at Artist Square Towers in West Kowloon, potentially the largest in Hong Kong history.
HK:02899.HK:Zijin Mining GroupZijin rose around 5% at the open, buoyed by the gold rally before broader market weakness set in.
HK:00788.HK:China TowerChina Tower extended the depreciation period of DAS assets to 10 years, expecting annual depreciation to drop by about RMB870 million.
US:BX:BlackstoneChina’s Wang Yi met Blackstone’s chairman and said “decoupling” is not a rational choice for China-U.S. relations.
HK:03606.HK:Fuyao Glass IndustryChairman Cho Tak Wong resigned, with his eldest son, Tso Fai, taking over leadership.
HK:03690.HK:MeituanMeituan added RMB2 billion to support merchants and upgraded its store-opening tool.
HK:00939.HK:China Construction BankCCB aimed to provide more than RMB5 trillion in financing for manufacturing over the next three years.
US:PDD:PDD HoldingsCiti slightly cut its PDD target to USD167 but expected Q3 profit to beat.
HK:01810.HK:XiaomiLei Jun said Xiaomi has delivered about 400,000 cars in total and urged peers to stand firm against online trolling and malicious PR.

AI Eyes on Singapore: STI’s Quiet Edge, REITs Poised to Break Out, and Big-Name Deals Stir the Tape

Reporter-style wrap. One symbol → one news. Short, no tables. All companies named with market-coded symbols.

SGX:S27.SI:S&P 500In SGD terms, the Straits Times Index is said to have outperformed the S&P 500 over the past five years, a result many market participants find hard to square with perception.
SGX:S68.SI:Singapore ExchangeDespite a corporate focus on derivatives and FX to maximise profit, SGX’s flagship benchmark has quietly held its own.
SGX:A50.SI:Thomson Medical GroupFlagged among highly geared names; backed by strong shareholders and planning a mega project in the JS-SEZ, which may require capital or equity partners.
SGX:P15.SI:Pacific Century Regional DevelopmentHighlighted but not viewed as stressed, given its insurance ownership.
SGX:T24.SI:Tuan Sing HoldingsHigh gearing with limited earnings; asset monetisation could help narrow the gap between share price and book value.
SGX:5WH.SI:Rex International HoldingAwaiting earnings uplift as oil and gas production ramps up.
SGX:U96.SI:Sembcorp IndustriesReceived conditional EMA approval to import renewable energy from Sarawak to Singapore.
SGX:J36.SI:Jardine Matheson HoldingsMoves to privatise Mandarin Oriental at US$3.35 per share.
SGX:M04.SI:Mandarin Oriental InternationalSet to be privatised by Jardine Matheson at US$3.35 per share, per the proposal.
SGX:S27.SI:S&P 500Technical view: near term, the FTSE REIT Index looks more constructive than the STI; REITs eye a breakout above 717–720 with potential upside toward ~800.
SGX:S27.SI:S&P 500STI outlook: still consolidating; after closing 4,328 on Oct 17 and slipping below minor 4,344 support, a dip beneath the 50-day (~4,309) could test 4,200 before a possible year-end recovery.

AI Watch on Malaysia: Land Buys, Mega Warrants, Green Power Wins & Airline Shake-Up Drive Bursa Headlines

Reporter-style wrap. One symbol → one news. Short, no tables. All companies named with market-coded symbols.

KL:8206.KL:Eco World Development GroupEco World, via 81%-owned Mutiara Balau, is buying 22.73 acres of freehold commercial land in Semenyih for RM82.19m to expand its Eco Radiance township; funding will be a mix of internal cash and borrowings, with the land sold by Boustead Balau (unit of Boustead Properties, which holds 19% of Mutiara Balau).
KL:1941.KL:PTT Synergy GroupPTT won three infrastructure contracts worth RM106.1m from Darby Property (Lagong) and Prolintas Expressway; unit Pembinaan Tetap Teguh will handle Elmina Business Park works and the Strathairlie Interchange on Guthrie Corridor Expressway, starting Oct 2025 and completing by early 2027.
KL:7167.KL:Chin Hin Group PropertyChin Hin Group Property is acquiring Segambut land for RM31.74m after a prior deal with YNH Property fell through; plans call for 585 serviced apartments (GDV ~RM239.1m) with construction targeted for 2027–2031.
KL:3158.KL:YNH PropertyYNH was referenced as the previous counterparty to Chin Hin Group Property’s scrapped land deal in Segambut.
KL:3395.KL:Berjaya CorporationBerjaya Corp proposed a bonus issue of 33 free warrants for every 100 shares; full exercise over five years could raise up to RM704.27m, pending shareholder approval and final exercise price.
KL:AGX.KL:AGX GroupAGX’s Vietnam unit signed two logistics service agreements with Sun PhuQuoc Airways for cargo forwarding, transport, customs brokerage and aircraft-on-ground support; fees will be billed per shipment.
KL:0215.KL:Solarvest HoldingsSolarvest’s 33%-owned SM01 Sdn Bhd received Tenaga Nasional approval to operate a 29.99MWac solar plant under CGPP, selling power virtually to Pearl Computing Malaysia; SM01 is held by Shizen Malaysia (49%), Solarvest Asset Management (33%) and HSS Engineering (18%).
KL:0185.KL:HSS EngineersHSS Engineers’ unit HSS Engineering holds 18% in SM01 Sdn Bhd, the CGPP solar operator approved by Tenaga Nasional.
KL:5347.KL:Tenaga NasionalTenaga Nasional granted operational approval for SM01’s 29.99MWac CGPP solar facility supplying Pearl Computing Malaysia.
KL:5099.KL:Capital ACapital A and AirAsia X waived the need for a Thai SEC (Takeover Panel) exemption, clearing a key condition for consolidating all AirAsia-branded airlines under AirAsia X.
KL:5238.KL:AirAsia XAirAsia X advances the airline consolidation after waiving the Thai regulatory exemption alongside Capital A.
KL:0207.KL:Mestron HoldingsMestron signed an MoU with China-based Trina Solar to explore a Malaysia renewable-energy collaboration targeting installation and distribution of 50MW of PV modules in 2026.
KL:9741.KL:Rohas TecnicRohas reported MACC freezing and seizure orders tied to a 2015 contract at 86.8%-owned HG Power Transmission; certain bank accounts are affected, with the group saying the probe is isolated from other operations.
KL:THMY.KL:THMY HoldingsTHMY, ahead of its Oct 23 ACE Market debut, posted 1QFY2026 net profit of RM3m on revenue of RM14.2m, led by in-circuit test solutions (RM11.4m) and functional circuit test solutions (RM1.1m).
KL:JSB.KL:Jentayu SustainablesJentayu Sustainables rescheduled its EGM to Dec 4 (from Oct 22), to be held at noon at Menara Felda, Kuala Lumpur.

President Donald Trump has spent much of his second term recasting Washington as a hands-on market player. In June, his administration secured a “golden share” in U.S. Steel to retain control even after its sale to Japan’s Nippon Steel. Two months later, the government took a 10% stake in struggling chipmaker Intel. Tariffs are central to this strategy, doubling as leverage in dealmaking—most notably when Pfizer agreed in September to sell prescriptions directly to consumers via TrumpRx in exchange for tariff relief.

Nothing, however, matches the potential day-to-day impact of Trump’s push to shift TikTok’s U.S. ownership from China’s ByteDance to a consortium of American investors. An executive order signed in September framed the plan as a way to protect data, privacy, and users from foreign influence—while generating significant gains for U.S. backers.

Beyond ownership, the government’s operational role looms large. Working with Oracle, officials would help build a U.S.-specific version of TikTok, oversee safety and data safeguards, train the recommendation algorithm, and review source code. The order also empowers the Attorney General to receive information from the new venture, with “trusted security partners” able to share data across agencies—signaling deep federal visibility into the platform.

The deal’s fate remains uncertain and requires approval from Beijing, which hasn’t endorsed it. Tensions have grown: Trump reacted to fresh Chinese export controls with new tariff threats and hinted he could skip a meeting with President Xi Jinping. A similar tariff clash derailed an earlier iteration of the TikTok plan in April.

If finalized, the arrangement could give the administration unusual influence over content rules and law-enforcement requests—authority other social platforms have typically resisted. Recent history shows how ownership shapes moderation: Elon Musk’s overhaul of Twitter (now X) relaxed prior policies, and Meta adjusted its standards after Trump’s re-election. Trump has said he wants TikTok to treat all viewpoints fairly, even as he’s openly mused about favoring his own.

Security concerns continue to drive the push. U.S. officials worry ByteDance could be compelled under Chinese law to share data or tune algorithms for propaganda—fears that fueled a bipartisan law demanding a TikTok spin-off or ban. Trump, once a fierce critic, now supports a sale to mostly American investors, with ByteDance retaining a small stake. A senior official has said the U.S. government itself wouldn’t hold equity or appoint a board member.

Oracle cofounder Larry Ellison—an ally and major Republican donor—has a prominent role securing the venture’s infrastructure, and Trump has said the Murdoch family is among the investors. Vice President JD Vance argues that placing TikTok with established U.S. institutions will align decisions with business interests rather than a foreign state. Still, in an era when the line between public power and private influence is blurred, skeptics question whether shifting ownership alone will insulate a platform used by half of Americans from political pressure—whether from Beijing or from powerful U.S. stakeholders.

Keppel REIT’s latest deal is drawing mixed reviews. The trust will buy a 75% stake in Australia’s freehold Top Ryde City Shopping Centre, a move pitched as strategic diversification into retail that modestly lifts distributions per unit (DPU) and broadens portfolio resilience. Yet the purchase also dilutes its hallmark exposure to Singapore’s prime offices—often the main attraction for local investors.

As at June 30, Keppel REIT’s S$9.4 billion portfolio was almost entirely offices, with Singapore assets—stakes in Marina Bay Financial Centre, Ocean Financial Centre, One Raffles Quay and Keppel Bay Tower—making up 78.6%. The manager said on Oct 8 it currently holds only about 100,000 sq ft of retail space within office assets; post-deal, retail will be 4.2% of an enlarged S$9.8 billion portfolio.

The A$393.8 million (S$334.8 million) purchase price matches an independent valuation. Including fees, stamp duty and expenses, total cost is A$427.4 million (S$363.5 million). Funding will be 60% via perpetuals and a new-unit placement, with the remaining 40% in AUD debt. Pro forma, the transaction would have raised 2024 DPU by 0.9%, trimmed end-2024 NAV by 0.8%, and left aggregate leverage roughly unchanged at 41.6%. Keppel REIT has since placed nearly 115 million new units at S$0.983 to raise S$113 million; the pro forma assumed a larger, cheaper issue at S$0.90.

Sourcing is notable. Keppel REIT is partnering ASX-listed MA Financial Group, which will hold 25% and act as property and asset manager for Keppel REIT’s stake. Fees to MA Financial will be paid out of the REIT manager’s entitlements, though the manager retains a 0.5% divestment fee on any sale. The REIT highlights this co-ownership model—used with Mirvac at 255 George Street, 8 Chifley Square and the David Malcolm Justice Centre—as a way to tap partners’ local expertise while keeping oversight.

More diversification may follow. Low cap rates for Singapore offices make accretive buys difficult, pushing listed REITs to seek higher yields overseas. Keppel REIT books cap rates of 3.25%–3.4% for its flagship Singapore towers, versus 5.88%–7.25% for Australian assets such as 8 Exhibition Street (Melbourne) and 6 Giffnock Avenue (NSW). Still, investors worry about foreign-market volatility and currency drag: over five years, the AUD, KRW and JPY have weakened ~12%, 23% and 30% against the SGD.

Keppel REIT units trade at an annualised 1H 2025 yield of 5.6% and a 19% discount to NAV—reasonable for a prime office landlord. Even so, unitholders will be watching closely to see whether the shift toward retail and overseas markets enhances long-term value or erodes the Singapore-office edge that defines the franchise.

U.S.–China Tensions Put Cooking Oil in the Crosshairs

America’s stock of trade disputes with China may soon include cooking oil. President Donald Trump said the U.S. is weighing a halt to Chinese imports as “retribution” for Beijing’s reluctance to buy American soybeans. While he didn’t specify, the likely target is used cooking oil (UCO)—a waste stream from homes and restaurants that’s refined into biofuels such as renewable diesel.

UCO imports are politically fraught. U.S. farm groups and some lawmakers argue low-priced foreign feedstocks undercut demand for domestically grown oils used in biofuels. The U.S. became a net UCO importer by early 2022, but shipments from China have already fallen this year. A formal ban would therefore be largely symbolic.

Trump’s threat followed an October post on Truth Social accusing China of shunning U.S. soybeans—America’s largest farm export—and harming U.S. growers. China, the world’s top soybean buyer, uses the crop for animal feed and cooking oil. It sourced roughly a fifth of its 2024 imports from the U.S. but has withheld purchases since May 2025, turning instead to South American suppliers, leaving U.S. farmers facing weak prices and swollen inventories.

For China, a U.S. stop on UCO imports would likely be manageable. The U.S. was the top destination for Chinese UCO in 2024 at a record 1.27 million tonnes, yet volumes slid this year after Beijing removed tax relief on overseas UCO sales and Washington raised tariffs. January–July shipments totaled about 387,000 tonnes, roughly half the prior year’s pace. Chinese traders might face short-term pressure—rerouting to Europe, accepting lower prices, or holding more inventory—but UCO revenues are small compared with soybean trade.

The U.S. picture is more complicated. Despite Trump’s claim that America can “easily” supply its own cooking oil, higher federal biofuel blending goals imply continued reliance on imported feedstocks. Domestic processing capacity is a bottleneck: the U.S. cannot crush enough oilseeds to satisfy both food and fuel needs.

U.S. resistance to Chinese UCO has also been fueled by quality and integrity concerns. Industry groups and lawmakers urged tighter verification amid speculation—unproven—that some UCO shipments were blended with fresh palm oil. Cheap UCO surged into the U.S. in 2023 as producers chased state and federal incentives for low-carbon fuels, intensifying fights over eligibility for the Inflation Reduction Act’s 45Z clean-fuel tax credit. Because UCO has a low carbon-intensity score, it often earns higher credits than domestic soybean oil.

Policy has already shifted. In January, the outgoing Biden administration excluded biofuels made with foreign feedstocks from 45Z eligibility. In July, Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act went further, limiting the credit to U.S.-controlled producers using North American feedstocks. With successive 90-day U.S.–China trade truces set to be tested again in November, UCO has become a fresh—and politically charged—front in a broader economic confrontation.

America’s Market Balancing Act: AI Euphoria, Dollar Doubts, and the Risk of a Harsher Reckoning

The U.S. stock market has whipsawed on renewed trade tensions yet sits near record highs, propelled by AI-fueled optimism reminiscent of the late-1990s tech boom. Innovation is undeniably lifting productivity, but the rally’s froth raises the risk of a painful correction—one that could hit harder and wider than the dot-com bust.

Exposure to U.S. equities is far larger today. American households have ramped up stock holdings over the past 15 years, and foreign investors—especially in Europe—have piled in, aided by a strong dollar. That tight linkage means any sharp U.S. downturn would echo globally.

A crash on the scale of 2000 could erase more than US$20 trillion in U.S. household wealth—about 70% of 2024 GDP—threatening consumption already weaker than pre-dot-com levels. A 3.5-point hit to consumption could shave roughly two points from GDP growth before investment effects. Abroad, losses could top US$15 trillion—near 20% of the rest of the world’s GDP—far exceeding early-2000s spillovers.

Historically, a crisis lifted the dollar as investors sought safety, cushioning foreign consumers holding dollar assets. That backstop looks less certain: despite policies that might have supported it, the dollar has slipped against major currencies, and investors are increasingly hedging dollar risk—signaling waning confidence.

Doubts about U.S. institutional strength amplify the concern. Questions over the Federal Reserve’s independence, alongside legal and political cross-currents, could further erode trust in the dollar and American assets. Meanwhile, growth faces headwinds: tariffs, China’s critical-minerals controls, and geopolitical uncertainty—all with record government debt limiting room for fiscal rescue compared with 2000.

Escalating tariff skirmishes risk broader damage as supply chains bind most economies to the U.S. and China. Avoiding erratic policy—particularly moves that threaten central-bank independence—remains essential to prevent a market rupture.

The world also needs new sources of growth. For years, productivity gains and returns have clustered in a few regions—chiefly America—leaving asset prices and capital flows perched on a narrow base. Stronger, more balanced growth elsewhere—Europe advancing its single market, emerging economies sustaining reforms—would widen the foundation and steady global markets.

Bottom line: a crash today would likely be deeper and more global than the brief downturn after the dot-com bust. With more wealth at risk and less policy space, the structural vulnerabilities are greater. Preparing for harsher global consequences is prudent.

Thank you

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