It’s been a week of heavy hitters and high stakes.
From a major US fund manager doubling down on Singapore Telecommunications Limited (SGX: Z74) to Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited (SGX: O39) fortifying the trade bridge between Australia and Southeast Asia, Singapore’s blue chips are making strategic power moves.
Meanwhile, all eyes are on Beijing as the Trump-Xi Summit kicks off, with giants like NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) watching closely.
These milestones could carry meaningful implications for investors.
Trump and Xi Open High-Stakes Beijing Summit
US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping commenced a two-day summit in Beijing on 14 May 2026, the first visit by a sitting US president to the Chinese capital in nearly a decade.
Trade, tariffs, Taiwan, Iran, and artificial intelligence are all expected to feature on the agenda.
The summit follows a turbulent year in US-China relations that saw sweeping tariffs and retaliatory levies exceed 100% before a trade truce was reached in October 2025.
Analysts expect the most tangible outcomes to include an extension of that tariff truce and renewed Chinese purchases of US agricultural products and The Boeing Company (NYSE: BA) aircraft.
A high-profile delegation of US business leaders, including NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, accompanied Trump to the summit.
For investors, the meeting carries significant implications for global supply chains, rare earth exports, and the broader direction of the world’s two largest economies.
Capital Group Emerges as Substantial Singtel Shareholder
US asset manager Capital Group has crossed the 5% ownership threshold in Singapore Telecommunications (Singtel), triggering a substantial shareholder filing with the SGX.
In a filing dated 8 May, Singtel disclosed that Capital Group had purchased 19.3 million shares on 6 May at an average price of S$4.67 per share, compared with the stock’s March closing high of S$5.21.
The purchases brought Capital Group’s total stake to approximately 838 million shares, or 5.1%, making it likely the second-largest shareholder after Temasek Holdings, which holds just over 50%.
The timing is notable as it comes ahead of Singtel’s full-year results announcement on 21 May and approximately a month before holders of Singtel’s Special Discounted Shares (SDS) become eligible to transfer and sell their shares for cash.
As of 7 May 2026, around 83,000 or 13% of the 615,000 SDS shareholders had already sold their shares.
Singtel closed at S$4.69 on 8 May, up 2.4% year to date.