At a glance
Justin Low Weng Fatt of Chasen Holdings Limited
The company engineered a financial turnaround, delivering a S$7.3 million profit from continuing operations and expanding its total equity to S$114.2 million through heavy asset revaluations
During the FY2026 financial year, following a restructuring period in FY2025 that was previously impacted by a S$10.5 million goodwill impairment and discontinued operations
Across its global operating footprint spanning Singapore, China, and the United States, within the specialized industrial relocation, logistics engineering, and SGX mainboard public market context
Core continuing operations returned to profitability because management eliminated goodwill impairments, capitalized on high-barrier cleanroom relocation demand, and booked S$31.1 million in property revaluation gains
Management drove US revenue up by over S$7 million, weaponized real estate assets to boost net asset value, and aggressively termed out S$39.4 million of short-term debt
The Post-Restructuring Year
Chasen Holdings Limited has shed its old skin. The corporate noise of FY2025—a year defined by the messy exit of discontinued operations and heavy accounting impairments—has finally given way to the leaner, more focused continuing operations of FY2026. For the street, the central question is whether this structural overhaul marks a permanent return to form or a temporary reprieve. This report identifies the core financial shifts that prove management is finally finding its footing in a post-restructuring environment.
The Massive Turnaround in Continuing Operations
The headline numbers from the previous year were a mirage. While the group reported a staggering S33.2 million profit in FY2025, that figure was artificially inflated by a S46.8 million gain from discontinued operations. Strip away that one-off windfall, and Chasen’s core business was actually bleeding, posting a S$13.6 million loss after tax from continuing operations.
Management has engineered a genuine operational pivot in FY2026. The group delivered a S7.3 million profit after tax from continuing operations, a swing of nearly S21 million. This recovery was underpinned by the absence of the S$10.5 million goodwill impairment that haunted the previous year’s books. This move from red to black in the primary business lines is a far more sustainable indicator of corporate health than the disposal gains of the past. The company is re-aligning with its primary mission:
“Moving Ideas, Moving Tomorrow”
A High-Stakes Bet on the American Market
The trajectory of Chasen’s geographic diversification is unmistakable. While Singapore remains the bedrock of the group’s revenue, the United States has emerged as the critical alpha driver for future growth.
| Geographic Market (Continuing) | Revenue Mix: FY2026 vs FY2025 (S$ Million) |
| Singapore | 52.4M vs 50.0M |
| China | 18.4M vs 23.5M |
| USA | 36.6M vs 29.5M |
The expansion in the American industrial sector—where revenue climbed by over S$7 million in a single year—serves as a higher-margin buffer against the price-sensitive and contracting Chinese market. This pivot toward the US heartland reduces regional cyclical risk and positions Chasen to capture higher value-add projects in Western manufacturing.
Realizing Deep Latent Value through Asset Revaluation
Management has successfully weaponized its real estate portfolio to shore up the balance sheet. Chasen recorded a S6.8 million fair value gain on investment property alongside a massive S24.3 million gain on the revaluation of leasehold land and buildings.
These non-cash items were the primary engine behind the surge in Total Equity, which jumped from S82.2 million to S114.2 million. Consequently, the Assets Revaluation Reserve has blossomed to S$32.3 million. While these entries do not represent immediate operational cash flow, they significantly raise the “floor” price of the stock by boosting the Net Asset Value per share. This provides a substantial margin of safety for investors, anchoring the book value against market volatility.
The Specialized Engine Room of the Business
The revenue mix for FY2026 confirms that a single specialized segment is now the group’s primary economic engine.
- Specialist Relocation (S$86.3 million)
- Technical & Engineering (S$19.8 million)
- Third Party Logistics (S$12.2 million)
The Specialist Relocation segment is the group’s true economic moat, providing S$8.9 million in profit from operations. Per Note 1(a), this division utilizes specialist manpower equipped with specialized material handling tools, equipment, and vehicles to manage sensitive machinery within cleanroom and “raised floor” environments. This high-barrier-to-entry combination of human capital and technical expertise ensures a level of client stickiness that standard, commoditized logistics providers simply cannot replicate.
Investor Reflection: The Debt Maturity Shift
The group’s liability structure has undergone a high-stakes transformation. Management has aggressively moved to term out its debt, slashing current bank loans from S78.6 million to S39.2 million while non-current bank loans surged from S4.2 million to S48.5 million.
This was a vital liquidity maneuver rather than just a strategic preference. With Cash and Cash Equivalents dropping from S26.6 million to S12.3 million over the year, extending the debt maturity profile was a necessity to protect against a short-term liquidity crunch. Total Liabilities may have ticked up slightly to S$130.5 million, but the extension of the repayment runway provides the group with the breathing room required to fund its US expansion.
A Leaner Future
Chasen’s FY2026 results reflect a business that has successfully scrubbed its balance sheet, exited the drag of underperforming segments, and revalued its core physical assets to reflect true market value. The pivot to profitability in continuing operations is a significant milestone, but the ultimate test lies in the coming year. Has Chasen merely bought itself time through asset revaluation, or is the US growth engine powerful enough to carry the weight of a S$130 million liability load without further accounting boosts in FY2027?
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