When a stock reaches its 52-week high, it's easy to believe the most significant gains have already been realized.
However, for investors focused on income, the share price is just one part of the equation.
A more critical question is whether the fundamental dividends can continue their growth from this point.
Three Singapore blue-chip stocks are currently trading near their 52-week highs, yet the dividend stories for each are distinctly different.
Here is a detailed examination.
$Singapore Exchange(S68.SI)$
Singapore Exchange, the sole operator of the local bourse, continues to demonstrate the strength of its wide-moat business.
Net revenue for the first half of FY2026 increased 7.6% year-on-year to S$695.4 million, driven by a 16.2% surge in its Equities – Cash division as average daily trading volumes rose nearly 20%.
Although net profit appeared relatively flat at S$342.7 million, dividend investors should look beyond this headline figure.
A one-off impairment of S$15.0 million related to Scientific Beta affected the results; on an adjusted basis, net profit actually grew a much healthier 11.6%.
More importantly for long-term compounding, SGX generated S$363.7 million in operating cash flow.
This comfortably covers its quarterly dividend of S$0.110 per share.
Management's commitment to increasing the dividend by S$0.0025 every quarter through FY2028 provides a level of forward visibility that is uncommon among blue-chip companies.
At a price of S$21.17, the yield of 2.1% is modest, but it represents a path for steady and predictable growth.
$Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited(O39.SI)$
Singapore's second-largest bank by assets reported record total income of S$14.6 billion for FY2025, a 1% increase from the previous year.
What is impressive is how the bank managed a declining interest rate environment by leveraging its wealth management arm, where fees increased by 33%.
Net interest income fell 6% to S$9.2 billion due to compressed margins, but healthy loan growth provided a necessary cushion.
However, the dividend requires careful analysis.
The total FY2025 payout of S$0.99 includes a S$0.16 special dividend; excluding that, the recurring ordinary dividend is S$0.83.
At a share price of S$22.81, the headline yield is 4.3%, but the ordinary yield is closer to 3.6%.
If OCBC's "Next Frontier" strategy continues to capture Asian wealth flows – which now contribute 38% of total income – there is potential for this payout to grow even as interest rates normalize.
Investors should base their expectations on the recurring income, not the one-time bonuses.
$Seatrium Limited(5E2.SI)$
Seatrium completes the trio with a very different investment proposition.
Revenue for FY2025 surged 24.3% year-on-year to S$11.5 billion, and net profit more than doubled to S$323.6 million.
On the surface, doubling its dividend to S$0.03 per share appears to show strong momentum.
But as dividend investors, it is essential to examine the underlying financials.
Free cash flow only just turned positive at S$19.7 million – a very slim margin for a company of this size.
With a capital-intensive order book of S$17.8 billion, cash demands will remain high through 2033.
At a price of S$2.48, the trailing yield is just 1.2%.
This is a recovery story, not a primary income investment.
While the S$32 billion pipeline indicates strong operational momentum, dividend investors should moderate their expectations until free cash flow demonstrates it can consistently support a higher payout.
$(5E2.SI)$ $(O39.SI)$ $(S68.SI)$
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