[SINGAPORE] The following companies saw new developments that may affect trading of their securities on Friday (May 9).
OCBC: The bank’s net profit for the first quarter fell on lower net interest income and higher operating expenses. Net profit for the three months ended Mar 31, 2025, stood at S$1.88 billion, compared with S$1.98 billion from the year-ago period, it said on Friday. The earnings beat the S$1.86 billion consensus forecast in a Bloomberg survey of five analysts. Net interest income for the quarter fell 4 per cent to S$2.35 billion, due to a falling interest rate environment. Net interest margin was down 23 basis points to 2.04 per cent for the quarter, from 2.27 per cent in the previous corresponding period. Shares of OCBC closed 0.7 per cent or S$0.11 lower at S$16.16 on Thursday, before the announcement.
ST Engineering: The group’s revenue rose 8 per cent to S$2.9 billion for the first quarter ended March, from S$2.7 billion in the corresponding year-ago period, on the back of broad-based growth across all segments. In a business update on Friday, the group said this was led by “very strong growth” in its defence and public security segment, of which revenue jumped 18 per cent year on year to S$1.3 billion, from S$1.1 billion. Revenue from its commercial aerospace division edged up 0.1 per cent to S$1.153 billion from S$1.152 billion, while revenue from its urban solutions and satellite communications business rose 4 per cent to S$446 million from S$429 million. The group also reported contract wins amounting to S$4.4 billion for Q1, bringing its order book to S$29.8 billion as at Mar 31. Some S$7.3 billion of these contracts are expected to be delivered this year. Shares of ST Engineering closed 1.1 per cent or S$0.08 lower at S$7.51 on Thursday.
Far East Orchard: The hospitality and student housing player’s net profit more than doubled to S$17.3 million for the first quarter ended Mar 31, 2025, from S$6.9 million the previous corresponding period, the company announced on Thursday. The significant rise in its Q1 net profit was driven by a one-off gain of S$9.2 million from the acquisition of an additional 6.7 per cent interest in Woodlands Square in January 2025, it added. This gain arose from the higher fair value of net assets acquired compared to the purchase consideration. However, revenue for the period fell 8.6 per cent to S$46.5 million, while operating profit declined by 4.4 per cent to S$17.3 million. These declines were attributed to reduced contributions from the hospitality business, which was affected by ongoing refurbishment works at Rendezvous Hotel Perth Scarborough. Shares of Far East Orchard closed 1 per cent or S$0.01 lower at S$1.04 on Thursday, before the announcement.
Daiwa House Logistics Trust (DHLT): The manager announced on Friday that its distributable income for the quarter was 9.9 per cent lower at S$8.2 million, down from S$9.2 million in the same year-ago period. This was mainly attributed to increased interest expenses from additional borrowings, higher interest rates due to the refinancing and restructuring of loans, and lower realised exchange gains. Units of DHLT closed at 1.8 per cent or S$0.01 higher at S$0.575 on Thursday.
Marco Polo Marine: The integrated marine logistics company on Friday posted a 23.4 per cent year on year decline in net profit to S$9.2 million, from S$12 million in the corresponding period a year ago. The results translate to earnings per share (EPS) of S$0.0028, against an EPS of S$0.0029 in the same period last year. Revenue also dipped 14.4 per cent year on year, amounting to S$52.7 million compared to S$61.6 million in the same period of FY2024. Shares of Marco Polo Marine closed flat at S$0.043 on Thursday.