Singapore Industrial Output Rebounds to Over 1-Year High

2025-10-24 05:16 By Czyrill Jean Coloma 1 min. read

Singapore's manufacturing production soared by 16.1% year-on-year in September 2025, rebounding from an upwardly revised 9% drop in the previous month and well above market expectations of a 0.5% gain.

It marked the strongest growth since August 2024, as output recovered sharply for electronics (13.2% vs -8.5% in August) and biomedical manufacturing (45.9% vs -37.4%).

In addition, output declined at a softer pace for general manufacturing industries (-4.7% vs -13.7%).

On the other hand, output moderated for chemicals (1.2% vs 4.5%) and transport engineering (13.8% vs 18.8%), while it continued to fall for precision engineering (-5.9% vs -1.3%).

On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, industrial activity surged to a more than fourteen-year high of 26.4% in September, rebounding from an upwardly revised 11% drop in the previous month and easily surpassing market forecasts of an 8.6% rise.



News Stream
Singapore Manufacturing Output Exceeds Forecasts
Singapore's manufacturing production surged 16.6% year-on-year in January 2026, accelerating from an upwardly revised 10.9% gain and surpassing market expectations of 11% growth. Electronics output soared to 44% from 19.6% in December, largely driven by a sharp expansion in semiconductors (52% vs 20.5%). Overall growth was also supported by stronger performances in chemicals (2.3% vs 1.3%) and precision engineering (13.2% vs 8.1%). On the other hand, production contracted sharply in biomedical manufacturing (-33.1% vs -10.9%), while growth slightly eased in transport engineering (25.2% vs 26.4%). In addition, output in general manufacturing industries fell (-2.6% vs 0.4%). On a monthly basis, output rose 5.3%, rebounding from a 13.3% fall in the previous month. Excluding biomedical manufacturing, manufacturing production climbed to 24.1% in January 2026, from 13.1% in the prior month.
2026-02-26
Singapore Factory Output Slows More Than Expected
Singapore’s manufacturing production rose 8.3% year-on-year in December 2025, easing from an upwardly revised 18.2% growth in November and falling short of the expected 10.1% increase. This marks the softest rise since a decline in August, weighed down by a sharp fall in biomedical manufacturing (-38.8% vs 79.1% in November), primarily due to lower pharmaceutical output (-69.7%). Production also contracted in chemicals (-1.6% vs 2.1%), while transport engineering expanded at a slower pace (19.9% vs 24.2%). Meanwhile, electronics output grew faster (30.8% vs 18.1%), driven by a steeper rise in semiconductors (32.4%). Production also increased for precision engineering (3.4% vs 2.4%) and remained unchanged for general manufacturing industries (0% vs -2.6%). On a monthly basis, manufacturing activity slumped 13.3%, the largest decline since October 2020, following a 7.8% drop in November.
2026-01-26
Singapore Manufacturing Output Beats Forecasts
Singapore’s manufacturing production grew 14.3% yoy in November 2025, slowing sharply from a downwardly revised 28.9% rise in October, which was the fastest increase since November 2010, while slightly surpassing market forecasts of a 14.2% rise. This marked the third straight month of expansion, though the weakest in the sequence, following a decline in manufacturing activity in August. Growth easing was seen in biomedical manufacturing (79.3% vs 89.8% in October), transport engineering (24.2% vs 29.7%), and electronics (8.9% vs 25.6%), mainly due to a steep decline in computer peripherals and data storage. At the same time, precision engineering expanded by 2.4%, slowing significantly from a 13.4% rise in October, weighed down by lower output in machinery and systems. Meanwhile, general manufacturing continued to contract (-4.8% vs -5.5%). On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, industrial activity plunged 10.2%, sharply reversing a downwardly revised 11.2% increase in October.
2025-12-26