logo
Singapore full-year growth forecast upgraded on strong Q2, but MTI warns of uncertainty ahead

Singapore full-year growth forecast upgraded on strong Q2, but MTI warns of uncertainty ahead

Business Times2 days ago
[SINGAPORE] The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) upgraded its full-year growth forecast range on Tuesday (Aug 12), but warned: 'However, the economic outlook for the rest of the year remains clouded by uncertainty, with the risks tilted to the downside.'
The upgrade to a range of 1.5 to 2.5 per cent, from 0 to 2 per cent before, largely reflects better-than-expected performance in the first half of the year, said MTI.
The ministry said it will continue to monitor developments in the global and domestic economies closely, and adjust the forecast if necessary over the course of the year.
For the second quarter, year-on-year growth was revised upwards marginally to 4.4 per cent, from the advance estimate of 4.3 per cent . This was an improvement from the preceding quarter's 4.1 per cent.
With the Q2 figure, gross domestic product (GDP) growth for the first half was 4.3 per cent.
On a quarter-on-quarter seasonally-adjusted basis, the economy grew 1.4 per cent in Q2, similar to the advance estimate and reversing from Q1's 0.5 per cent decline. Singapore thus avoided a technical recession, defined as two straight quarters of quarterly contraction.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
Expected upgrade
After Q2 advance estimates in mid-July beat market expectations, several private-sector economists had raised their full-year growth forecasts .
At its macroeconomic review in end-July, Singapore's central bank also said that full-year growth for 2025 may be firmer than previously forecast, with the economy's output likely to be close to potential.
Back in April, with the advance Q1 figures, MTI had downgraded its full-year forecast to between 0 and 2 per cent, from between 1 and 3 per cent before. This was due to a 'significant deterioration' in the external demand outlook as the US-China tariff war intensified.
When the Q1 figures were updated in May, MTI maintained that lower forecast. On Tuesday, MTI noted that it did so in view of the potential impact of sweeping tariffs announced in April.
'Since then, the performance of most advanced and regional economies has been more resilient than expected,' said MTI.
The US' 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs postponed the negative potential impact, while front-loading activity temporarily boosted production and exports.
Tensions have de-escalated, as the US struck deals with several trading partners – including the Eurozone, Japan, South Korea and several South-east Asian countries – for lower-than-previously-announced reciprocal tariffs.
MTI noted that US-China talks continue, indicating a possible extension of their tariff truce.
As the 2025 growth of key economies will not be as weak as expected, MTI updated its assessment of Singapore's external outlook.
Weakness ahead
However, in the second half of the year, growth is expected to slow for Singapore's major trading partners, as the front-loading boost dissipates and reciprocal tariffs take effect.
US growth may weaken with a cooling labour market and dampened consumer spending. The Eurozone may see a pullback in exports when US tariffs kick in during H2.
China's growth is also projected to ease, as export growth weakens even though domestic consumption and investment growth remain firm.
In South-east Asia, growth of key economies is similarly expected to moderate due to US' reciprocal tariffs and softening domestic demand in some economies.
MTI said: 'More importantly, significant uncertainties remain in the global economy due in part to the continued unpredictability of the US' trade policies, including the timing and extent of the sectoral tariffs on pharmaceutical products and semiconductors.'
Risks in the global economy are tilted to the downside, it said. First, a re-escalation of tariff actions could lead to a renewed spike in economic uncertainty, causing businesses and households to pull back sharply on spending and hiring.
Second, a sharper-than-expected tightening of global financial conditions could shock financial markets, leading to destabilising capital flows. These could trigger latent vulnerabilities in banking and financial systems.
Third, potential escalations in geopolitical tensions could disrupt supply of energy commodities, putting renewed pressure on global energy prices.
Amid this backdrop, slower growth in Singapore's outward-oriented sectors could thus drag its overall growth in H2 – particularly in manufacturing, where growth is expected to weaken as US tariffs weigh on end-market demand.
Nevertheless, transport engineering and precision engineering clusters remain as 'some bright spots' in the sector, said MTI.
Growth in the wholesale trade is similarly expected to slow for the remainder of 2025; finance and insurance will see dampened growth; and consumer-facing sectors such as retail trade and food and beverage (F&B) services are anticipated to stay lacklustre.
Sectoral performance
Of the 13 sectors tracked, only F&B services recorded a year-on-year contraction. The sector shrank by 0.5 per cent on year, extending the 0.7 per cent year-on-year fall in the preceding quarter.
Construction rose 6 per cent year on year, faster than 4.9 per cent in the previous quarter, with both public and private sector construction output expanding.
Sequentially, the sector grew 5.7 per cent, reversing from a 2 per cent fall in the preceding quarter.
The wholesale trade sector grew 4.7 per cent year-on-year, accelerating from 4 per cent the previous quarter. Growth was driven by the machinery, equipment and supplies segment, while the fuels and chemicals as well as 'others' segments also expanded.
The sector grew 2.8 per cent quarter on quarter, turning around from a 0.5 per cent contraction in Q1.
In Q2, manufacturing expanded 5.2 per cent year on year, up from 4.7 per cent in the previous quarter. All cluster marked output rises, except for chemicals and general manufacturing.
The sector shrank 0.4 per cent quarter on quarter, extending the 5.2 per cent contraction before.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

First Resources posts 43.6% higher H1 net profit of US$149.2 million
First Resources posts 43.6% higher H1 net profit of US$149.2 million

Business Times

time20 minutes ago

  • Business Times

First Resources posts 43.6% higher H1 net profit of US$149.2 million

[SINGAPORE] First Resource posted a 43.6 per cent rise in net profit to US$149.2 million for the first half of 2025 on Thursday (Aug 14). This was up from US$103.9 million in the same period a year prior, the company said in a bourse filing. Sales jumped 47.4 per cent to US$673.9 million from S$457.2 million, underpinned by higher average selling prices and stronger sales volumes, said the Indonesian oil producer. The rise in sales volume was supported by organic growth in the group's production output, as well as the contribution from PT Austindo Nusantara Jaya since its acquisition was completed in May. The rise in sales prompted a 56.3 per cent rise in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) to US$262.3 million. Equity attributable to owners of the company rose 3.3 per cent, to US$1.43 billion as at June 30, from US$1.38 billion as at Dec 31, 2024, mainly due to the profits generated during the half, partially offset by dividend payouts and foreign currency translation losses arising from the depreciation of the Indonesian rupiah against the US dollar. Over the quarter, the volume of fresh fruit bunches harvested jumped 23 per cent to two million tonnes from 1.6 million tonnes in the corresponding year-ago period, representing a 1.2 per cent rise in sales value. Crude palm oil production rose by 28.9 per cent year on year to 554,519 tonnes for a 42.8 per cent surge in sales value. Shares of First Resources closed flat at S$1.64 on Wednesday.

Chinese investors eyeing Indonesia to avoid US tariffs, tap local market
Chinese investors eyeing Indonesia to avoid US tariffs, tap local market

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

Chinese investors eyeing Indonesia to avoid US tariffs, tap local market

[JAKARTA] Gao Xiaoyu, the founder of an industrial land consulting firm in Jakarta, has been inundated with calls from Chinese companies eager to expand or set up operations in Indonesia as they try to shield themselves from the United States' hefty import tariffs. The 19 per cent US tariff rate for goods from Indonesia is the same as for Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand, and just below Vietnam's 20 per cent. China's rates currently exceed 30 per cent. But Indonesia, South-east Asia's biggest economy and the world's fourth most populous country, has an edge over its neighbours - the potential of its vast consumer market. 'We are quite busy these days. We have meetings from morning till night,' said Gao, who set up her company PT Yard Zeal Indonesia in 2021 with four employees and now has more than 40. 'The industrial parks are also very busy.' Indonesia's economy expanded at a better-than-expected 5.12 per cent in the second quarter, the fastest pace in two years, government data showed last week. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies. Sign Up Sign Up 'If you can establish a strong business presence in Indonesia, you've essentially captured half of the South-east Asian market,' said Zhang Chao, a Chinese manufacturer who sells motorcycle headlights in Indonesia, the world's third biggest market for motorbikes. Vietnam and Thailand were among the major beneficiaries of the first wave of Chinese companies' overseas diversification, but amid the latest trade turmoil with the United States, other near neighbours are benefiting. 'There has always been a synergy ... with Chinese corporates having the confidence to set up shop with ease in Indonesia,' said Mira Arifin, the Indonesia country head at Bank of America. 'Indonesia has a huge talent pool with a dynamic young demographic that encourages foreign investors to rapidly build scale in the country.' Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has championed China ties, visiting Beijing in November where he held talks with President Xi Jinping and welcoming the Chinese Premier Li Qiang to Jakarta in May. Investment from China and Hong Kong into Indonesia was up 6.5 per cent year-on-year to US$8.2 billion in the first six months of 2025. Total FDI grew 2.58 per cent over the same period to 432.6 trillion rupiah (S$34 billion), and the government has said it expects more investments in the second half of the year. Massive consumer market To be sure, challenges persist across Indonesia, including regulatory hurdles, bureaucratic red tape, ownership restrictions, deficient infrastructure and the lack of a complete industrial supply chain that made China the 'workshop of the world' for decades. Some foreign investors have also raised concerns about the populist Prabowo's fiscal prudence, as he pushes ahead with his campaign promises, including a flagship programme to deliver free meals to schoolchildren and pregnant women. After falling in March to its lowest level against the US dollar since June 1998, the rupiah has steadied. It is currently trading about 1 per cent below its level at the end of last year. At the sprawling, more than 2,700 ha Subang Smartpolitan industrial park in West Java, executives said it had been inundated with enquiries from Chinese investors. 'Our phone, email and WeChat were immediately busy with new customers, agents wanting to introduce clients,' once the US-Indonesia trade deal was announced last month, said Abednego Purnomo, vice-president for sales, marketing and tenant relations of Suryacipta Swadaya, Subang Smartpolitan's operator. 'Coincidentally, all of them were from China.' Companies ranging from toy makers and textile firms to electric vehicle makers are scouring for facilities, particularly in West Java, the most populous province in Indonesia, which is home to the Patimban deep sea port. Chinese demand has pushed up prices of industrial real estate and warehouses by 15 per cent to 25 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2025, the fastest rise in 20 years, according to Gao, from the land consulting firm. Rivan Munansa, the head of industrial and logistics services at the Indonesian arm of global property consultant Colliers International said that there was an urgency among Chinese firms to move and the company was getting inquiries for industrial land 'almost every day' in the run-up to the tariff agreement. 'Most of them (Chinese companies) are looking for immediate opportunities. So, they want land and a temporary building that can be used immediately, it's like a crash programme,' Rivan said. Zhang said he signed up for a new four-floor office building in Jakarta in May at an annual rent of 100,000 yuan (S$17,850), up 43 per cent from last year, underscoring the pent-up demand. 'The 19 per cent level is lower than my expectation. I thought it would be 30 per cent,' Zhang said, referring to Indonesia's tariff deal and adding that net profit margins in China could be as little as 3 per cent. 'In Indonesia, it's relatively easy to achieve net profit margins of 20 per cent to 30 per cent.' And then there's the growing pool of consumers with household spending making up more than half of Indonesia's GDP. The gauge accelerated slightly to 4.97 per cent year-on-year in the second quarter, helped by several public holidays. 'Indonesia has always stood out for a different reason. Beyond supply chain diversification, Indonesia offers what few others in the regions can: a massive domestic market,' said Marco Foster, Asean director at Dezan Shira & Associates, an investment consultancy. REUTERS

Temasek prices US$1.5 billion worth of dollar-denominated fixed and floating-rate bonds due 2027
Temasek prices US$1.5 billion worth of dollar-denominated fixed and floating-rate bonds due 2027

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

Temasek prices US$1.5 billion worth of dollar-denominated fixed and floating-rate bonds due 2027

[SINGAPORE] Singapore investment company Temasek on Thursday (Aug 14) said it has priced two dollar-denominated bonds worth US$1.5 billion in total. On Wednesday, it had announced the launch of an offering comprising two-year fixed rate and two-year floating rate US dollar bonds. Under the bond offering, Temasek Financial (I) has priced US$1.5 billion worth of guaranteed notes due in 2027, in two tranches. It priced US$750 million worth of the two-year fixed rate bonds at a spread of 15 basis points over the two-year benchmark US Treasuries. Investors will be paid every six months at a coupon rate of 3.75 per cent per annum. Issued at 99.826 per cent, the bonds provide a yield to maturity of 3.841 per cent per annum. It also priced US$750 million worth of the two-year floating rate bonds at a spread of 38 basis points over the Secured Overnight Financing Rate. Investors holding these bonds will be paid quarterly interest payments. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up The bonds will be issued by its wholly owned subsidiary Temasek Financial (I), under its US$25 billion guaranteed global medium-term note programme. They will be unconditionally and irrevocably guaranteed by Temasek. Net proceeds from the issuance will be provided to Temasek and its investment holding companies to fund their ordinary course of business. Temasek has been assigned an overall corporate credit rating of 'Aaa' by Moody's Investors Service and 'AAA' by S&P Global Ratings, a division of S&P Global. The bonds will be offered to qualified buyers within and outside of the US, with the offering scheduled to close on Aug 20. An application will be made for the bonds' listing and quotation on the official list of the Singapore Exchange. The bonds are expected to list on the bourse on Aug 21. Citigroup, Bank of America Securities, Morgan Stanley and Societe Generale were joint bookrunners for the issuance.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store