The following are top SGX-listed companies renowned for generating robust free cash flows (FCF) and maintaining strong balance sheets:
1. Singapore Exchange Ltd (SGX: S68)
1. Singapore Exchange Ltd (SGX: S68)
- The Business: The sole approved financial exchange operator in Singapore.
- FCF & Financials: FCF nearly doubled from S$392.4 million in FY2023 to S$773.6 million by FY2025, buoyed by its resilient fee structures and lack of capital-intensive overhead.
 
2. Sheng Siong Group Ltd (SGX: OV8)
- The Business: One of Singapore' s largest supermarket chains with over 90 outlets.
- FCF & Financials: Continues to punch above its weight by generating S$215.8 million in FCF. The company maintains a " war chest" of cash with zero bank debt, enabling consistent dividend payouts.
 
3. UOL Group Limited (SGX: U14)
- The Business: A leading real estate developer and hospitality investor.
- FCF & Financials: Has seen its FCF surge to around S$1.2 billion, representing a robust 86% conversion rate from its operating income, allowing the company to aggressively pay down debt and multiply dividends.
 
4. HRnetGroup Limited (SGX: CHZ)
- The Business: A premier recruitment and staffing specialist operating across Asia.
- FCF & Financials: Maintains a completely debt-free balance sheet with over S$260 million in cash reserves. It consistently converts net income into FCF, supporting a trailing dividend yield of over 5.8%. 
 
5. Venture Corporation Limited (SGX: V03)
- The Business: A global provider of technology solutions and electronics manufacturing services.
- FCF & Financials: Backed by an exceptionally liquid balance sheet featuring over S$1.28 billion in net cash, providing a resilient cushion for its annual dividend distributions
The &ldquo Sleep Well at Night&rdquo Portfolio: 4 SGX Stocks That Thrive in Market Chaos
Market volatility is unavoidable, but some businesses are built to handle uncertainty better than others. These four stocks stand out for their resilience, strong cash flow, and ability to stay steady when markets turn chaotic.
Share
 
Market sell-offs can be unnerving even for the most seasoned investors. 
Here&rsquo s the hard part: the reasons for the sell-off differ every time &ndash think of the past five years, which included the pandemic, high inflation, recession fears, and geopolitical tensions &ndash there&rsquo s always a smart-sounding reason to sell. 
You can fight back against this temptation by holding onto quality stocks that are structured to hold up better during turbulent times. 
Then again, there is no amount of stocks you can own, even with a basket of these &ldquo Sleep Well at Night&rdquo stocks, that can eliminate portfolio volatility entirely. 
Instead, what this cohort can do is give you peace of mind that after the storm, these businesses will emerge, hopefully stronger than before. 
What Makes a &ldquo Sleep Well at Night&rdquo Stock
So, what qualities should a &ldquo Sleep Well&rdquo stock have? 
In essence, we want the crè me de la crè me names that generate consistent, resilient cash flows regardless of market cycles. 
Even better if these companies can maintain their dividend payouts during volatile periods. 
Having a strong financial position with manageable debt levels can help buffer them against tough times. 
Finally, the cherry on top would be for the companies to provide essential goods or services that will see steady demand even during downturns. 
Remember, the key takeaway is that during periods of uncertainty, business resilience counts so much more. 
Why Defensive Investing Still Matters in 2026
Investing conservatively is even more important during the uncertain times we&rsquo re living in. 
With markets gyrating wildly with every headline coming out of the Middle East, combined with historically stretched valuations, we&rsquo ve seen some sharp movements both on the downside and upside so far this year. 
In such an environment, you want to make sure you own resilient businesses that can help you stay invested while being reasonably assured of their survival moving forward.     
DBS Group Holdings Limited (SGX: D05), or DBS &mdash The Defensive Dividend Anchor
The first name on the list is, in my opinion, the ultimate comfort stock.
Not only is DBS backed by Singapore&rsquo s Temasek Holdings, it has also been a consistent income provider with dependable dividends. 
The local bank hasn&rsquo t missed an annual dividend since 2001. 
Furthermore, DBS has been profitable for ten straight years, with net profits rising from S$4.4 billion in 2017 to S$11.3 billion in 2025. 
This is the kind of resilience you want to see from a business. 
Venture Corporation Limited (SGX: V03), or Venture Corp &mdash The Cash Flow Fortress
Venture Corp is another candidate for the &ldquo Sleep Well&rdquo cohort this business has generated positive free cash flow (FCF) for a decade, with annual FCF averaging around S$290 million.
This performance is noteworthy, given the challenging environments we have seen across the decade. 
Although FCF has been volatile in the past few years, Venture Corp&rsquo s ability to post positive FCF consistently adds strong financial flexibility that helps cushion against downturns. 
Furthermore, it boasts an enviable balance sheet with a strong net cash position exceeding S$1 billion. 
The key takeaway is that being a consistent generator of cash flows strengthens a business&rsquo s resilience. 
Singapore Exchange Limited (SGX: S68), or SGX &mdash The Essential Services Provider
Next, SGX is a business that thrives during market chaos. 
The bourse operator earns fees from transactions conducted on its exchange. 
During volatile markets, transaction volumes rises, and as a result, SGX usually does pretty well. 
In fact, amid the Great Financial Crisis in 2008 and 2009, SGX&rsquo s annual dividend peaked at S$0.38 per share. 
SGX&rsquo s top-line growth has been steady as well, increasing from around S$801 million in the fiscal year ended 30 June 2017 (FY2017) to nearly S$1.4 billion in FY2025.
Consistent demand for a business&rsquo s products and services is a powerful mitigant against market uncertainty.   
CapitaLand Integrated Commercial Trust (SGX: C38U), or CICT &mdash The Long-Term Compounder
Finally, having a strong market position can allow a business to emerge stronger after a market crisis. 
CICT, with its status as the largest REIT in Singapore, is a great example of such a business. 
In recent times, the REIT has taken advantage of market downturns to beef up its portfolio, as seen in its expansion into Australia in 2021 and the acquisition of CapitaSky in 2022. 
CICT is big enough that it&rsquo s actually growing while everyone else is focused on keeping the lights on. 
How to Build a Portfolio That Helps You Sleep Better
On your end, to keep your portfolio steady, make sure you&rsquo re not putting all your money into one industry. 
Also, avoid borrowing money for stocks and stay away from hyped-up names that don&rsquo t have the profits to back up their lofty stock prices. 
Do focus on a business&rsquo s long-term fundamentals and do not be swayed by daily price action or market headlines. 
The worst thing you can do is to sell a quality business that is under share price pressure due to general market conditions.
So, do your best to manage your emotions trust that you have done a decent job (following the above) in constructing a portfolio that should stand up well in the midst of market volatility. 
Get Smart: The Best Portfolios Reduce Stress, Not Just Risk
In sum, investing does not mean you have to pay attention to each headline and price action daily. 
Owning a well-diversified portfolio of wonderful businesses that have a proven capacity to generate consistent cash flows can help you better deal with periods of uncertainty. 
Remember, staying invested in the market matters most. 
Oil prices are rising. Markets are swinging. And headlines are getting louder by the day.
In times like this, many investors look for predictions. But in our experience, what matters more is having a framework.
In this upcoming webinar, Chin Hui Leong shares how we approach volatile markets through three layers: what to buy, when to deploy capital, and how to build conviction in the businesses we own.
Because uncertainty is not something to avoid. It is something to prepare for. 
For SGX shareholders, there is another quarterly dividend collection of $0.1125 per share in about a month' s time.
SGX on strong uptrend. Share price closed above 2.0 fibo (21.29) this week.
Could be on course to test the next resistance at 2.272 fibo (21.86) by end Apr.
Could be on course to test the next resistance at 2.272 fibo (21.86) by end Apr.
Next resistance at 2.272 fibo (~21.86) if it can maintain its momentum.
  DBS research raised target prie of SGX to $22.50
07-03-09_Singapore Exchange Ltd (SGXL.SI)_10apr2026.pdf
Does SGX still have the legs to move up further as it has risen for 5 consecutive weeks? (Up by ~ 22.3%)
Or time to take a breather, pull back, consolidate and move sideways before the next push?
Or time to take a breather, pull back, consolidate and move sideways before the next push?
Why didn' t u buy more shares over the years?
Nippon72 ( Date: 11-Apr-2026 11:49) Posted:
|
Always grateful to my part-time accounts lecturer for sharing the beauty of buying SGX in the early 90s:  Monopoly biz, market up (euphoria, fomo) or down (fear, loss aversion) people still have to trade through only SGX.  Sounded logical in my innocent mind then, never bothered or learned MA price, MACD, RSI, ROI, EPS etc.
Just bought 2000 shares with my CPF at $1.67 average. Never ever look back since. Already recouped my cost donkey years ago, not to mention my bragging rights of 26% divyy rate!
Today whenever I savour the dividend or look at its ATH, I thank my accounts lecturer in my heart.
Now probably hope for stock split, bonus shares or divvy increase. This 2000 shares will be part of my bequest to my loved ones. 
" The time to sell is NEVER!"
 
Just bought 2000 shares with my CPF at $1.67 average. Never ever look back since. Already recouped my cost donkey years ago, not to mention my bragging rights of 26% divyy rate!
Today whenever I savour the dividend or look at its ATH, I thank my accounts lecturer in my heart.
Now probably hope for stock split, bonus shares or divvy increase. This 2000 shares will be part of my bequest to my loved ones. 
" The time to sell is NEVER!"
 
This SGX bull broke past 21 and is still pushing hard. Let' s see how far it can go today.
Amazing run!
Amazing run!
About to hit 21 soon, though there are plenty of shares on queue to sell at 20.99 and 21.00
yes. then 22
Can SGX push further to reach $21 today before profit taking sets in?
For SGX to double from ~S$19.5 today to S$40 in the future, it would require an extraordinary re‑ rating of its business model and earnings power. Historically, SGX has been a steady dividend‑ yielding exchange stock, not a high‑ growth momentum play, so such a move would be unprecedented.
📊 Current Position
- Price (Mar 2026): ~S$19.5
- Market cap: ~S$20.9 billion
- Dividend yield: ~2.3%
- P/E ratio: ~32 (already rich compared to global peers)
🔎 What Would Be Needed for S$40
- Earnings growth: SGX would need to roughly double net income (currently ~S$650m) to justify such a valuation.
- Global hub status: Becoming Asia&rsquo s dominant exchange for FX, commodities, and digital assets could trigger a re‑ rating.
- Strategic M& A: Acquiring or merging with another major exchange could transform its scale.
- Investor perception shift: SGX would need to be seen less as a defensive dividend stock and more as a growth tech platform.
⚠ ️ Constraints
- Valuation ceiling: At P/E ~32, SGX is already trading at a premium. Doubling would imply a P/E of ~60 unless earnings also double.
- Competition: Hong Kong Exchange, CME, and Tokyo remain strong rivals.
- Dividend yield compression: At S$40, yield would fall below 1.2%, making it less attractive to income investors.
- Historical precedent: SGX has never traded anywhere near S$40 its long‑ term range has been S$7&ndash 20.
📈 Scenario Outlook
| Scenario | Drivers | Price Potential |
|---|---|---|
| Bull Case | Strong growth in FX, commodities, digital assets | S$22&ndash 25 |
| Base Case | Stable earnings, modest expansion | S$18&ndash 21 |
| Bear Case | Lower trading volumes, sector correction | S$15&ndash 17 |
| Extreme Bull (S$40) | Doubling profits + global re‑ rating | Very unlikely |
✅ Takeaway: SGX reaching S$40 is theoretically possible but highly improbable under current fundamentals. It would require a transformational shift in earnings and investor perception. More realistic upside lies in the S$22&ndash 25 range if expansion strategies succeed.
 
Blackrock becomes subsantial shareholder after purchasing 3,000 shares at $19.27 on 20 Mar.
https://links.sgx.com/1.0.0/corporate-announcements/DN7QP3VN8Q6MNIQ3/880199__BlackRock_%20Form3_final_Mar2026.pdf
L& T Securities - Idea of the Day
The Business Times reported that SGX ($18.30, down 7 cents) announced on Thursday that its February performance had the highest securities daily average value (SDAV) since 2020.
The local bourse&rsquo s SDAV surged 45 per cent year on year to S$2.1 billion, propelling total securities market turnover up by 30 per cent year on year to S$38.5 billion. This broad-based market strength was accompanied by the Straits Times Index (STI) crossing the historic 5,000-point threshold, reaching an all-time high of 5,041 on Feb 23. This was supported by broad-based strength across real estate and industrials.
The benchmark index advanced 2 per cent month on month, closing February at 4,995.07, which represents an 8 per cent increase for the year.
Trading activity across all stock segments was elevated, SGX said, with STI turnover rising 38 per cent year on year to S$1.4 billion. Furthermore, small and mid-cap turnover soared 135 per cent on the year on the back of sustained institutional demand, while retail daily turnover jumped 45 per cent to hit its highest level in 13 years.
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) also experienced a significant acceleration in trading momentum. Monthly ETF turnover surged 172 per cent year on year to S$1.1 billion, driven by net inflows of S$643 million, which marks the highest level since December 2024.
SGX noted that investments in ETFs by Supplementary Retirement Scheme holders exceeded S$1 billion for the first time, signalling a growing shift towards ETFs for long-term investing. In the derivatives space, &ldquo trading activity remained resilient as risk management needs intensified across selected Asian markets and asset classes&rdquo , added SGX.
Derivatives daily average volume (DAV) gained 22 per cent year on year to 1.7 million contracts, lifting the overall derivatives traded volume to 27.1 million contracts.
This 6 per cent year-on-year growth was achieved despite the month having fewer trading days due to the Chinese New Year holidays, noted the local bourse. Foreign exchange and commodity derivatives also posted a series of record highs during the month. The SGX USD/CNH FX Futures contract set a record DAV of US$24 billion and a month-end open interest of US$27.1 billion, as market participants engaged in active risk management while onshore Chinese markets were closed for the festive period. SGX INR/USD FX Futures also saw a peak single-day volume of US$7 billion on Feb 3, reflecting repositioning and hedging flows following policy and trade-related headlines.
Amid active hedging tied to moves in South Korean equities, SGX KRW/ USD Mini Futures set a new DAV record of US$713 million, up 43 per cent month on month. SGX TWD/USD FX Futures posted a DAV high of US$378 million, up 35 per cent month on month, with month-end open interest rising 28 per cent to US$26 million, on the back of &ldquo growing interest in regional technology and semiconductor supply-chain themes&rdquo , SGX said. Meanwhile, the broader commodities segment&rsquo s traded volume grew 5 per cent year on year to 5.3 million contracts, anchored by iron ore derivatives, which climbed 7 per cent to 4.7 million contracts.
SGX&rsquo s market cap stands at S$19.6bln and currently trades at 28x forward PE and 8.6x PB, with a dividend yield of 2.25%. Consensus target price stands at S$19, representing 4% upside from current share price. Despite strong fundamentals, valuations are currently rich and we recommend a HOLD on SGX.
The Business Times reported that SGX ($18.30, down 7 cents) announced on Thursday that its February performance had the highest securities daily average value (SDAV) since 2020.
The local bourse&rsquo s SDAV surged 45 per cent year on year to S$2.1 billion, propelling total securities market turnover up by 30 per cent year on year to S$38.5 billion. This broad-based market strength was accompanied by the Straits Times Index (STI) crossing the historic 5,000-point threshold, reaching an all-time high of 5,041 on Feb 23. This was supported by broad-based strength across real estate and industrials.
The benchmark index advanced 2 per cent month on month, closing February at 4,995.07, which represents an 8 per cent increase for the year.
Trading activity across all stock segments was elevated, SGX said, with STI turnover rising 38 per cent year on year to S$1.4 billion. Furthermore, small and mid-cap turnover soared 135 per cent on the year on the back of sustained institutional demand, while retail daily turnover jumped 45 per cent to hit its highest level in 13 years.
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) also experienced a significant acceleration in trading momentum. Monthly ETF turnover surged 172 per cent year on year to S$1.1 billion, driven by net inflows of S$643 million, which marks the highest level since December 2024.
SGX noted that investments in ETFs by Supplementary Retirement Scheme holders exceeded S$1 billion for the first time, signalling a growing shift towards ETFs for long-term investing. In the derivatives space, &ldquo trading activity remained resilient as risk management needs intensified across selected Asian markets and asset classes&rdquo , added SGX.
Derivatives daily average volume (DAV) gained 22 per cent year on year to 1.7 million contracts, lifting the overall derivatives traded volume to 27.1 million contracts.
This 6 per cent year-on-year growth was achieved despite the month having fewer trading days due to the Chinese New Year holidays, noted the local bourse. Foreign exchange and commodity derivatives also posted a series of record highs during the month. The SGX USD/CNH FX Futures contract set a record DAV of US$24 billion and a month-end open interest of US$27.1 billion, as market participants engaged in active risk management while onshore Chinese markets were closed for the festive period. SGX INR/USD FX Futures also saw a peak single-day volume of US$7 billion on Feb 3, reflecting repositioning and hedging flows following policy and trade-related headlines.
Amid active hedging tied to moves in South Korean equities, SGX KRW/ USD Mini Futures set a new DAV record of US$713 million, up 43 per cent month on month. SGX TWD/USD FX Futures posted a DAV high of US$378 million, up 35 per cent month on month, with month-end open interest rising 28 per cent to US$26 million, on the back of &ldquo growing interest in regional technology and semiconductor supply-chain themes&rdquo , SGX said. Meanwhile, the broader commodities segment&rsquo s traded volume grew 5 per cent year on year to 5.3 million contracts, anchored by iron ore derivatives, which climbed 7 per cent to 4.7 million contracts.
SGX&rsquo s market cap stands at S$19.6bln and currently trades at 28x forward PE and 8.6x PB, with a dividend yield of 2.25%. Consensus target price stands at S$19, representing 4% upside from current share price. Despite strong fundamentals, valuations are currently rich and we recommend a HOLD on SGX.
SGX Group posts strong February performance with highest SDAV in six years 
https://links.sgx.com/1.0.0/corporate-announcements/5ZN1J2I76YRJ1NDK/878135_20260312%20SGX%20Group%20posts%20strong%20February%20performance%20with%20highest%20SDAV%20in%20six%20years.pdf
https://links.sgx.com/1.0.0/corporate-announcements/5ZN1J2I76YRJ1NDK/878135_20260312%20SGX%20Group%20posts%20strong%20February%20performance%20with%20highest%20SDAV%20in%20six%20years.pdf
SBB today - 200,000 shares bought at $17.28 to $17.35 ($3,470,701)
SBB today - 100,000 shares bought at $17,55 to $17.85 ($1,780,335)
