How GIC and Temasek are managing your money

Singapore's Temasek mulls three-way split, Bloomberg News reports​

By Reuters
August 20, 2025


Man passes a logo of state investor Temasek Holdings at their office in Singapore

A man passes a logo of state investor Temasek Holdings at their office in Singapore July 8, 2014. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Aug 20 (Reuters) - Singapore's Temasek (TEM.UL) is weighing a reorganisation into three investment vehicles, as the state owned investor looks to improve returns and efficiencies, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday.

One unit would focus on the biggest local holdings such as flag carrier Singapore Airlines (SIAL.SI), opens new tab while the other would largely look at foreign investments, the report added, citing people familiar with the matter.


A third unit would include all of Temasek’s fund investments.

Temasek did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comments.

The state investor, which currently allocates responsibilities by region and asset class, is considering the revamp to allow executives to sharpen their focus and improve performance, the report said.

A decision could be unveiled in the coming months, though the plan might be rolled out earlier, according to the Bloomberg report.
Sure Huat Kah Liao :)
 

SingPost Q1 operating profit tumbles 60% to $3.4 million amid falling revenue, margin squeeze​

Revenue fell 23.8 per cent to $162.3 million compared with $213 million in the year-ago period.

Revenue fell 23.8 per cent to $162.3 million compared with $213 million in the year-ago period.

Aug 22, 2025

SINGAPORE - Singapore Post’s group operating profit for the first quarter ended June 30 came in at $3.4 million, a 60 per cent year-on-year drop from $8.4 million.

The decrease in operating profit comes on the back of increased market pressure and competition, said SingPost in a bourse filing on Aug 22.

Group revenue fell 23.8 per cent to $162.3 million compared with $213 million in the year-ago period. The decline was largely attributed to the significant reduction in international deliveries.

The drop means SingPost’s profit margin was a mere 2 per cent. S&P Global Ratings downgraded its long-term issuer credit rating on SingPost to “BBB-” from “BBB” in July due to its high fixed operating costs.

Group operating expenses declined 22.7 per cent from $204.6 million to $158.2 million following the divestment of its Australia business in March 2025.

The company is yet to appoint a new chief executive after having fired Mr Vincent Phang in 2024 over the mishandling of a whistleblower complaint.

By segments

Lower delivery volumes meant that the domestic and international delivery business recorded lower revenue, while letter mail volume contracted due to continuing electronic substitution. Domestic and international e-commerce volume also fell.

SingPost and Alibaba agreed to unwind their respective minority cross-shareholdings in Quantium Solutions International (QSI) in April, resulting in the sale of QSI’s 17.6 per cent stake in Shenzhen 4PX to Cainiao.

The group then entered into a sale and purchase agreement for the divestment of QSI in five Asia-Pacific countries and territories to Morning Global.

Property leasing revenue, mainly comprising rental income from SingPost Centre, was stable, said the group. Overall occupancy rate at the property was 97.8 per cent as at June 30, 2025, compared with 96 per cent previously.

It added that the property assets business (including SingPost Centre) is also expected to remain stable.

Earlier in August, SingPost divested 10 Housing Board shophouses for $55.5 million, after putting them up for sale and leaseback. The group said current post office services will be maintained, with the transaction still subject to the necessary approvals before completion.

The freight forwarding business recorded lower revenue amid volatility in the sea freight market. In July, the group divested its entire freight forwarding business, Famous Holdings, for $177.9 million.

As at end-June, the group had $728.1 million in cash and cash equivalents, compared with $696.4 million as at end-March.

Borrowings were flat at $349.6 million and total equity stood at $1.6 billion as at June 30, down 0.3 per cent.

Outlook

SingPost stated that it aims to become a “leaner and more focused” business, with the recent divestments in line with that plan.

The divestments have “strengthened its balance sheet, reduced debt, and enhanced its flexibility to respond to market opportunities”.

The group will now concentrate its resources on its postal and logistics business, as well as property. This will better position it to “drive operational efficiency”.

SingPost will be focusing on building market share, maximising asset utilisation and enhancing its digital capability in the domestic delivery business, it said.

The group added that it will continue to take an active approach to prioritise yield enhancement and operational efficiency of all assets.

The counter closed flat at 50 cents on Aug 21.

THE BUSINESS TIMES
 
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