Executive Summary
Singapore faces its most significant trade policy challenge since independence. Despite having a free trade agreement with the United States since 2004, the city-state was hit with a 10% baseline tariff on “Liberation Day” (April 2, 2025), with threats of sectoral tariffs up to 100% on pharmaceuticals. This case study examines Singapore’s exposure, economic outlook, and strategic response framework.
Key Findings:
- GDP growth projected to slow from 4.0% (2025) to 1-3% (2026)
- $3.1 billion pharmaceutical exports face 100% tariff threat
- 40% of U.S. exports (pharma, semiconductors, electronics) at risk
- Trade diversification and supply chain resilience now national priorities
I. THE SINGAPORE CONTEXT
Economic Structure & Vulnerabilities
Trade Dependency:
- External demand accounts for 63% of GDP
- Trade-to-GDP ratio exceeds 300% (one of world’s highest)
- U.S. represents 8.3% of Singapore’s GDP through direct trade
Critical Export Sectors to U.S.:
- Pharmaceuticals (13% of U.S. exports)
- $3.1 billion annual exports
- Faces potential 100% tariff
- July 2025: 93.5% plunge in pharma exports to U.S.
- Semiconductors & Electronics (27% of U.S. exports)
- Advanced chip manufacturing and testing
- 25% tariff threat under reciprocal policy
- 40% penalty risk for transshipped goods
- Precision Engineering (~10% of U.S. exports)
- Aerospace components
- Medical devices
- High-value manufacturing
Existing Trade Framework:
- 27 Free Trade Agreements covering 85% of global GDP
- ASEAN Economic Community (600 million consumers)
- RCEP, CPTPP memberships
- Historic U.S.-Singapore FTA (2004) – currently bypassed
II. IMPACT ASSESSMENT
A. Direct Economic Impacts (Current)
GDP Growth Trajectory:
- 2024: 4.4% (strong performance)
- 2025: ~4.0% (upgraded despite tariffs)
- 2026: 1-3% projected (significant slowdown)
- Recession risk if sectoral tariffs implemented
Sector-Specific Damage:
| Sector | 2024 Baseline | Current Status | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmaceuticals | $3.1B exports | -93.5% (July) | CRITICAL |
| Semiconductors | Strong growth | Stable but vulnerable | HIGH |
| Electronics | Robust | Front-loading boost | MEDIUM-HIGH |
| Financial Services | 4.7% loan growth | Resilient | MEDIUM |
| Tourism/Services | +56% Chinese tourists | Domestic strength | LOW |
Labor Market:
- Slower wage growth expected
- Hiring caution in export sectors
- Government support programs activated (SkillsFuture expansion)
- Unemployment remains low but vulnerable
B. Monetary & Fiscal Response
Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) Actions:
- Two monetary policy easings in 2025 (Jan, Apr)
- October 2025: Maintained S$NEER appreciation path (status quo)
- Policy positioned to respond to future shocks
- Core inflation: 0.4% (Jul-Aug 2025), forecast 0.5-1.5% (2026)
Government Fiscal Measures:
- Singapore Economic Resilience Taskforce (April 2025, chaired by DPM Gan Kim Yong)
- Tax rebates for affected businesses
- CDC vouchers and ComCare support for households
- SkillsFuture enhancements for workforce retraining
- Short-term working capital support
C. Geopolitical & Strategic Impacts
Diplomatic Position:
- July 2025: DPM Gan’s U.S. visit – U.S. “non-committal” on tariff reductions
- No tariff deal secured despite negotiations
- Pharmaceutical concessions prioritized over semiconductors
- Singapore framed as “trusted partner” vs. China alternative
Regional Dynamics:
- ASEAN solidarity efforts
- “China+1” beneficiary positioning
- Supply chain diversion opportunities
- Enhanced regional integration push
III. OUTLOOK SCENARIOS (2026-2028)
Scenario 1: Tariff Reversal (Oxford Economics Upside)
Probability: 5-10%
Triggers:
- Trump administration pre-midterm election pivot
- Free trade deals to generate positive headlines
- U.S. recession fears prompt policy reversal
Singapore Impact:
- GDP growth rebounds to 4-5% (2026)
- Pharmaceutical exports recover fully
- Business confidence surge
- Investment inflows accelerate
- SGD strengthens 3-5%
Household Impact:
- Job security improves dramatically
- Wage growth resumes 4-6% annually
- Lower import prices (U.S. goods)
- Government reduces crisis support, increases investment
Timeline: Would require dramatic shift by Q2 2026 to impact full-year growth
Scenario 2: Status Quo – 10% Baseline Continues
Probability: 55-65%
Characteristics:
- Current 10% baseline remains
- No additional sectoral tariffs
- Gradual trade adaptation
- Moderate economic headwinds
Singapore Impact:
- GDP: 1.5-2.5% (2026), 2.0-3.0% (2027-28)
- Manageable slowdown, no recession
- Pharma sector faces structural decline
- Semiconductor sector stable but pressured
- Services sector compensates partially
Household Impact:
- Modest real wage growth (1-2%)
- Employment stable but limited expansion
- Moderate cost of living increases
- Government support continues (CDC vouchers, subsidies)
Business Adaptation:
- Export diversification to EU, ASEAN, Middle East
- Supply chain reconfiguration (18-24 months)
- Productivity investments accelerate
- Some firms relocate operations
Timeline: Multi-year adjustment period (2026-2028)
Scenario 3: Escalation – Sectoral Tariffs Implemented
Probability: 25-30%
Triggers:
- U.S.-China tensions escalate
- Trump implements 100% pharma tariff
- 25% semiconductor tariff activated
- Transshipment rules tightened (40% penalty tariffs)
Singapore Impact:
- GDP: 0-1% (2026), possible recession
- Pharmaceutical sector collapse (80-90% export loss)
- Semiconductor firms forced to relocate
- Financial sector strain from corporate distress
- SGD weakness (5-8% depreciation)
Household Impact:
- Retrenchments in manufacturing (15,000-25,000 jobs)
- Wage cuts and hiring freezes
- Higher unemployment (4-5% vs. current 2-3%)
- Inflation from supply chain disruption
- Expanded government crisis support
Business Impact:
- Mass restructuring in pharma sector
- Accelerated offshoring to U.S., EU
- Supply chain collapse in affected sectors
- Cascade to logistics, finance, professional services
- SME bankruptcies increase
Government Response:
- Emergency fiscal package ($8-15 billion)
- Major retraining initiatives
- Accelerated economic transformation
- Enhanced ASEAN integration
- Possible targeted capital controls
Timeline: Rapid deterioration within 6-9 months if implemented
Scenario 4: Partial Relief Through Negotiation
Probability: 30-40%
Negotiated Outcomes:
- Pharmaceutical exemption secured (100% → 10%)
- Semiconductor tariff capped at 10% (vs. 25% threat)
- FTA “reactivation” with specific carve-outs
- Singapore designated “trusted technology partner”
Singapore Impact:
- GDP: 2-3% (2026), 2.5-3.5% (2027-28)
- Key sectors protected from worst outcomes
- Competitive advantage vs. other Asian exporters
- Investment confidence restored partially
Strategic Implications:
- Singapore positioned between U.S. and China
- Becomes preferred Asian hub for U.S. companies
- Attracts firms leaving higher-tariff jurisdictions
- Enhanced role in tech supply chain security
Trade-offs Required:
- Stricter origin requirements (U.S. content rules)
- Technology transfer restrictions
- Enhanced supply chain transparency
- Possible limits on China-related business
Timeline: 6-12 month negotiation window, implementation by late 2026
Scenario 5: Long-term Structural Decline (10+ years)
Probability: 15-20%
Assumption: Oxford Economics analysis suggests U.S. tariff rates historically trend downward, but this takes 10+ years to return to pre-2025 levels.
Singapore Impact:
- Permanent loss of U.S. market share
- Structural economic transformation forced
- GDP growth structurally lower (2-2.5% long-term vs. 3-4% historic)
- Shift from manufacturing to services economy
- Population growth constraints tighten
Adaptation Path:
- Complete supply chain reorientation to non-U.S. markets
- Domestic consumption and regional trade priority
- Technology and services become dominant sectors
- Reduced dependence on global trade (relative)
IV. SINGAPORE’S STRATEGIC RESPONSE FRAMEWORK
A. Immediate Crisis Management (2025-2026)
1. Economic Resilience Taskforce Initiatives
Established April 2025, chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong:
- Business Support:
- Tax rebates and deferrals for affected exporters
- Working capital loans at preferential rates
- Export market diversification grants
- Supply chain reconfiguration subsidies
- Workforce Transition:
- SkillsFuture enhancements ($500M additional funding)
- Sector-specific retraining (pharma → biotech, semiconductors → AI)
- Job matching programs
- Wage support schemes for transitioning workers
- Household Support:
- CDC vouchers expansion
- U-Save utility rebates
- ComCare assistance for vulnerable families
- GST offset packages
2. Diplomatic Engagement
- Bilateral (U.S.):
- High-level missions (DPM Gan, Minister of Trade)
- Focus on pharmaceutical exemptions (priority)
- Framing Singapore as “China alternative” for trusted tech
- Leveraging defense/security partnership
- Multilateral:
- ASEAN coordinated response
- WTO dispute mechanisms (long-term)
- Engagement with other affected U.S. allies (Japan, Korea, EU)
3. Monetary Policy Flexibility
MAS positioned for further easing if needed:
- S$NEER policy band adjustments available
- Liquidity provision ready
- Financial stability monitoring enhanced
- Ready to respond to external shocks
B. Medium-Term Structural Adjustments (2026-2028)
1. Trade Diversification: “Trade 2030” Strategy Acceleration
New/Expanded Markets:
- European Union:
- Enhanced FTA utilization
- Pharma exports redirection
- Digital economy partnerships
- Middle East:
- GCC countries (Saudi Arabia, UAE)
- Healthcare exports (Singapore’s specialty)
- Financial services hub expansion
- Latin America:
- Pacific Alliance (Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru)
- Mercosur engagement
- Agricultural and industrial exports
- Africa:
- 80+ companies already supported by EnterpriseSG (2022-2025)
- Infrastructure and technology sectors
- Long-term growth market positioning
- ASEAN Deepening:
- ASEAN Trade-in-Goods Agreement (ATIGA) full utilization
- Digital economy frameworks
- Supply chain integration
- Regional value chains
Target: Reduce U.S. export dependence from 8.3% to 5-6% of GDP by 2028
2. Supply Chain Reconfiguration: “Multi-Shoring” Strategy
Moving beyond “China+1” to diversified production:
- Pharmaceutical Sector:
- Establish U.S.-based manufacturing (avoid tariffs)
- EU production expansion
- Maintain Singapore as R&D hub
- API (Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient) supply diversification
- Semiconductor Sector:
- Advanced packaging in Singapore (protected by tech leadership)
- Testing and validation centers
- Design and IP development priority
- U.S. fab partnerships (Arizona, Texas, Ohio)
- Manufacturing General:
- Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand production expansion
- Logistics hub model (not pure manufacturing)
- High-value segments retained in Singapore
- Regional assembly hubs
3. Economic Transformation: Moving Up the Value Chain
Priority Sectors for Investment:
- Artificial Intelligence & Data Centers:
- National AI Strategy 2.0: 15,000 AI experts (triple current)
- Sovereign AI infrastructure
- Regional AI hub positioning
- Data center expansion ($60B investment pipeline)
- Green Technology & Sustainability:
- Hydrogen-ready power plants (Jurong Island)
- Carbon Capture Utilization & Storage (CCUS)
- Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS)
- Green finance hub (already leading globally)
- Second LNG terminal (floating)
- Biotechnology & Precision Medicine:
- $18.4B RIE 2025 Plan (Human Health priority)
- 52 → 84 biotech firms by 2032 (target)
- Precision medicine research
- From manufacturing to R&D focus
- Space Technology:
- Space Technology Development Program 2.0
- $60M additional investment (2024)
- Satellite technology ecosystem
- Commercial space services
- Financial Services & Digital Finance:
- Fintech innovation
- Digital asset frameworks
- Wealth management (family offices)
- Green bonds and sustainable finance
Investment Allocation: $30-40B over 5 years (public + private)
C. Long-Term Strategic Positioning (2028-2035)
1. “Global-ASEAN” Model
Transform from “Global Hub” to “ASEAN-Integrated Global Connector”:
- Regional Integration Priority:
- ASEAN as primary market (600M consumers, growing middle class)
- Singapore as regional HQ and coordination center
- Production distributed across ASEAN
- Singapore provides services: finance, logistics, IP, R&D
- Global Connectivity:
- Changi Terminal 5 (50M passengers/year capacity)
- Port expansion and automation
- Digital trade corridors
- Maintained global financial center status
2. Technology Sovereignty & Security
- Critical Technology Self-Sufficiency:
- Energy: Hydrogen, solar, imports from multiple sources
- Food: 30% self-sufficiency goal (up from <10%)
- Water: Desalination expansion (NEWater model)
- Semiconductors: Secure supply agreements, strategic stockpiles
- Cybersecurity & Digital Infrastructure:
- National Digital Identity expansion
- Secure government cloud
- Critical infrastructure protection
- Digital resilience programs
3. Demographic & Workforce Evolution
- Talent Strategy:
- Selective immigration (high-skilled focus)
- Automation and productivity priority (counter workforce constraints)
- Lifelong learning culture (SkillsFuture embedded)
- Regional talent circulation (ASEAN mobility)
- Social Cohesion:
- Managed immigration growth (political sensitivity)
- Integration programs
- Ethnic harmony maintenance (historic priority)
- Aging population support systems
V. EXTENDED SOLUTIONS & RECOMMENDATIONS
For the Singapore Government
Immediate Actions (Next 6 months):
- Secure Pharmaceutical Exemption
- Make this #1 diplomatic priority with U.S.
- Leverage defense partnership and “China alternative” positioning
- Accept reasonable concessions (origin rules, transparency)
- Timeline: Urgently needed before more companies relocate
- Launch “Export Diversification Accelerator”
- $2-3B fund for market entry support
- Target: Double exports to EU, Middle East within 3 years
- Partner with trade associations and chambers of commerce
- Subsidize market research, legal costs, initial losses
- Establish “Resilience Fund” for Affected Workers
- $1B emergency fund for retrenchment support
- Enhanced job matching and retraining
- Wage subsidies for career transitions
- Bridge to long-term programs
- Monetary Policy Readiness
- Prepare for potential easing if growth falters
- Enhance financial sector liquidity facilities
- Coordinate with regional central banks
- Monitor currency stability closely
Medium-Term Priorities (12-36 months):
- Accelerate Trade 2030 Implementation
- Fast-track FTA negotiations (Latin America, Africa)
- Digital economy agreements priority
- Services trade expansion
- Regulatory harmonization with key partners
- Supply Chain Resilience Infrastructure
- National supply chain mapping
- Critical goods stockpiling (expand beyond current)
- Diversified logistics partnerships
- Real-time tracking and early warning systems
- Industrial Transformation
- Sector-specific roadmaps (pharma, semiconductors, manufacturing)
- Co-investment in overseas facilities
- R&D center incentives (keep IP in Singapore)
- Automation and productivity grants
- Regional Leadership
- Drive ASEAN economic integration
- Propose ASEAN crisis response mechanism
- Lead on digital economy standards
- Strengthen intra-ASEAN supply chains
Long-Term Vision (3-10 years):
- Post-Globalization Model
- Accept “end of hyperglobalization”
- Build “redundancy” into all critical systems
- Friend-shoring and trusted partnerships
- Reduce single-point dependencies
- ASEAN Economic Community 2.0
- True single market (like EU)
- Labor mobility frameworks
- Integrated supply chains
- Common external trade policy
- Technology Leadership
- Become indispensable in specific niches (AI, biotech, green tech)
- IP creation focus, not just manufacturing
- Global standard-setting role
- Research and innovation magnet
For Singapore Businesses
Immediate Survival Actions:
- Diversify Customer Base (90-Day Plan)
- Map existing products to new markets
- Engage EnterpriseSG for support
- Attend trade missions and expos
- Consider temporary pricing concessions to enter new markets
- Supply Chain Audit
- Document origin of all inputs
- Identify tariff exposure
- Find alternative suppliers
- Consider strategic inventory buildup
- Financial Resilience
- Secure credit lines now (easier before crisis hits)
- Cut non-essential costs
- Delay major capex unless strategic
- Build 6-12 months cash buffer
- Engage Government Support
- Apply for all available grants and tax reliefs
- Utilize SkillsFuture for employee retraining
- Join industry associations for collective advocacy
- Participate in trade missions
Strategic Adaptation (6-24 months):
- Multi-Market Strategy
- Primary Goal: Reduce U.S. revenue from X% to <20%
- Prioritize: EU, Middle East, ASEAN, China (where possible)
- Customize products for regional preferences
- Build local partnerships and distribution
- Value Chain Repositioning
- Pharmaceutical/Semiconductor:
- Consider U.S. manufacturing presence
- Keep R&D and high-value activities in Singapore
- Use Singapore as regional HQ and coordination center
- Manufacturing:
- Move labor-intensive work to lower-cost ASEAN
- Keep precision/automation/testing in Singapore
- Become integrator rather than pure manufacturer
- Pharmaceutical/Semiconductor:
- Digital Transformation
- Omnichannel sales strategy
- E-commerce expansion (especially for consumer goods)
- Digital marketing to reach global customers
- Use data analytics for market intelligence
- Innovation & Differentiation
- Move upmarket where tariff % matters less
- Develop unique IP and capabilities
- Focus on services, not just products
- Build brand value to support premium pricing
Long-Term Resilience:
- Become Truly Regional
- ASEAN-headquartered mindset
- Distributed operations across multiple countries
- Singapore as nerve center, not only production site
- Build ecosystem, not just single company
- Invest in People
- Continuous upskilling programs
- Retain top talent through crisis
- Build adaptable, multi-skilled workforce
- Create culture of resilience
- Sustainability & ESG
- Align with global green transition
- Access green financing
- Build long-term brand reputation
- Prepare for carbon border adjustments
For Singapore Households
Immediate Financial Protection:
- Increase Emergency Savings
- Target: 9-12 months expenses (vs. standard 3-6)
- Prioritize liquidity over returns
- Consider economy weakening, job market uncertain
- Budget for Inflation
- U.S. imports will cost more (electronics, food)
- Healthcare costs may rise
- Track spending, identify cuts
- Skill Development
- Utilize SkillsFuture credits (everyone has $500+)
- Priority areas: AI, data analytics, digital marketing, green tech
- If in pharma/semiconductors, start exploring alternatives NOW
- Consider part-time education while employed
- Debt Management
- Pay down high-interest debt
- Lock in fixed-rate loans if possible
- Avoid major purchases on credit
Career Resilience:
- If in Vulnerable Sectors (Pharma/Semiconductors Export):
- Update resume immediately
- Network actively in your industry
- Explore adjacent fields
- Consider internal transfer if company is diversifying
- Evaluate overseas opportunities (U.S., EU)
- If in Stable Sectors:
- Build “recession skills” (cost management, efficiency, digital)
- Become indispensable at current role
- Document achievements for future negotiations
- Build side income streams
- For Job Seekers:
- Target domestic-focused sectors: healthcare, education, services
- Government and GLCs (stable during crisis)
- SMEs in ASEAN-focused industries
- Avoid export-heavy manufacturing unless confident in resilience
Investment Strategy:
- Reduce U.S.-Dependent Exposure
- Singapore pharma and semiconductor stocks carry risk
- Diversify to ASEAN-focused companies
- Domestic services, REITs (less trade-exposed)
- Consider waiting for clarity before major moves
- Consider Beneficiaries
- “China+1” plays: Malaysian manufacturing, Vietnam
- Singapore banks (resilient, diversified)
- ASEAN consumer plays (growing middle class)
- Green energy and technology
- Monitor MAS Policy
- Further easing = SGD weaker, imported inflation higher
- Adjust bond holdings accordingly
- CPF still safe haven
- Consider fixed deposits if rates attractive
Access Government Support:
- Check Eligibility:
- CDC vouchers (regular disbursements)
- U-Save rebates
- ComCare (if income drops)
- GST vouchers
- MediSave top-ups
- SkillsFuture:
- Use credits before they expire
- Mid-career enhancement programs
- WSQ certifications
- Industry-specific training
VI. CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS
Singapore’s response will succeed or fail based on:
1. Speed of Adaptation
- 18-24 month window for critical adjustments
- Companies that wait will face worse outcomes
- Government support is front-loaded (act now)
- New market entry takes time (start immediately)
2. ASEAN Solidarity
- Regional cooperation critical
- Avoid beggar-thy-neighbor policies
- Collective bargaining power with U.S.
- Integrated supply chains benefit all
3. Technology & Innovation Leadership
- Must remain indispensable in key sectors
- IP creation, not just manufacturing
- Cannot compete on cost alone
- Quality, reliability, innovation are differentiators
4. Social Cohesion
- Economic stress tests social fabric
- Fair distribution of pain and support
- Ethnic harmony maintained
- Avoid political extremism and populism
5. Fiscal Sustainability
- Government has resources ($300B+ reserves)
- But long-term deficits unsustainable
- Must balance support with transformation
- Cannot subsidize forever
VII. CONCLUSION: NAVIGATING UNCERTAINTY
The Bottom Line
Singapore faces a pivotal moment. The Trump tariffs represent more than a trade dispute—they signal a fundamental shift in the global economic order away from open, rules-based trade toward bilateral, transactional relationships.
What’s At Stake:
- Singapore’s historic growth model (export-led, globalization beneficiary)
- Economic diversification built over decades
- Living standards and job quality
- Position as global hub and “neutral” player
Sources of Optimism:
- Strong Fundamentals:
- Low debt, substantial reserves
- Highly educated workforce
- World-class infrastructure
- Business-friendly environment
- Strong institutions and governance
- Strategic Position:
- Gateway to ASEAN (600M consumers, fastest-growing region)
- Financial center and logistics hub
- Technology and innovation capacity
- Trusted by both East and West (for now)
- Track Record:
- Successfully navigated 1997 Asian Crisis
- Managed 2008 Global Financial Crisis
- Adapted to COVID-19 rapidly
- History of pragmatic, effective responses
- Government Capability:
- Technocratic, competent leadership
- Long-term planning culture
- Fiscal resources to deploy
- Willing to make hard choices
Sources of Concern:
- Structural Exposure:
- Cannot change geography or size
- Trade dependency is fundamental
- Alternatives to U.S. market limited in short term
- Vulnerable to external shocks
- Geopolitical Risks:
- U.S.-China competition intensifying
- Forced to choose sides eventually?
- Technology decoupling accelerating
- Regional tensions (Taiwan, South China Sea)
- Domestic Constraints:
- Limited land and labor
- Aging population
- Rising inequality and social tensions
- Immigration politically sensitive
- Global Environment:
- Protectionism spreading beyond U.S.
- Deglobalization trend
- Climate change impacts
- Technology disruption (AI replacing jobs)
The Path Forward
Singapore’s optimal strategy combines:
- Immediate Crisis Management: Protect vulnerable sectors and workers
- Medium-Term Adaptation: Diversify markets and transform economy
- Long-Term Positioning: Lead ASEAN integration, technology leadership
- Pragmatic Flexibility: Ready to adjust as situation evolves
The Oxford Economics scenario of tariff reversal offering a 0.5pp global growth boost is unlikely but illustrates the scale of damage current policies inflict. More realistically, Singapore faces a multi-year adjustment requiring business transformation, workforce retraining, and strategic repositioning.
Success is not guaranteed but possible. Singapore has navigated existential challenges before. With decisive leadership, business agility, and social solidarity, the city-state can emerge from this crisis not just intact but potentially stronger—more diversified, more innovative, and more resilient.
The question is not whether Singapore will survive the Trump tariffs, but what kind of Singapore emerges on the other side.
VIII. KEY TAKEAWAYS & ACTION CHECKLIST
For Government Officials:
- ☐ Pharmaceutical exemption must be top diplomatic priority (Q1 2026)
- ☐ Accelerate Trade 2030 market diversification initiatives
- ☐ Prepare additional monetary easing options (MAS)
- ☐ Expand business support programs (tax, credit, subsidies)
- ☐ Launch ASEAN supply chain integration initiative
For Business Leaders:
- ☐ Conduct 90-day market diversification plan
- ☐ Audit supply chain for tariff exposure
- ☐ Secure credit lines and build cash reserves
- ☐ Apply for all available government support
- ☐ Explore regional production options (Malaysia, Vietnam)
For Individuals:
- ☐ Increase emergency savings to 9-12 months
- ☐ Upskill using SkillsFuture (focus: AI, digital, green tech)
- ☐ If in vulnerable sector, update resume and network
- ☐ Review investment portfolio (reduce U.S.-export exposure)
- ☐ Check eligibility for government support schemes
For Investors:
- ☐ Reduce holdings in Singapore pharma and semiconductor exporters
- ☐ Increase ASEAN-focused companies
- ☐ Consider “China+1” beneficiaries (Malaysia, Vietnam)
- ☐ Monitor MAS policy for currency implications
- ☐ Favor domestic services and REITs (less trade-exposed)
Document Version: 1.0 | Date: December 21, 2025
Classification: Public Analysis | Update Frequency: Quarterly
This case study synthesizes public information and represents independent analysis. Scenarios are illustrative and subject to significant uncertainty.