At a glance
Lincotrade & Associates
Group secured a record S$117.2 million order book and a S$3.9 million net profit, which surpassed the entirety of its FY2025 earnings
On December 31, 2025, marking the end of the six-month first-half financial period for 2026
Singapore's construction and interior fit-out industry, expanding specifically into the high-growth regional data centre and commercial market segments
Earnings grew because the company deliberately shifted away from lower-margin residential work toward high-complexity data centres. This structural change expanded gross profit margins to 15%
Group utilized a high 40–50% tender win rate to secure projects. It also leveraged its in-house carpentry processing facility to control construction costs
De-risking the Investment
Lincotrade & Associates is aggressively securing a record backlog, the Group is effectively de-risking its investment profile. With KGI Securities 12-month target price of S$0.366—representing a 14.4% upside from current levels—the thesis for Lincotrade is no longer just about potential; it is about the execution of a highly visible growth runway.
The Backlog That Defies Gravity
As of December 31, 2025 (1H 2026), Lincotrade’s order book reached a staggering S117.2 million. This figure has nearly tripled from the S39.5 million recorded in June 2024, providing rare near-term revenue visibility for FY2026 and FY2027.
However, we must distinguish between management optimism and analytical conservatism. While management expects to recognize approximately 60% of this backlog in 2H 2026, analysts at KGI Securities adopt a more cautious assumption of ~44% to account for potential execution and certification risks. Even with this conservative lens, the revenue step-up remains profound. This growth is underpinned by a robust S$200 million tender pipeline and a historical win rate of 40–50%. A key pillar of this competitive Moat is the Group’s regulatory standing:
“Lincotrade is registered with the BCA under the CR06 Workhead with a L6 grade, allowing it to tender for government jobs with no tender limits, and has operated its own in-house carpentry processing facility since 2006 to support project delivery, quality control and cost management.”
Chasing Complexity for Better Margins
Lincotrade is executing a deliberate shift away from lower-margin residential projects toward commercial and data-center fit-outs. This “mix shift” is already yielding results; in 1H 2026, gross margins expanded by 2.8 percentage points to 15.0%.
The most compelling segment is data-center projects, which now represent approximately 23% of the total order book. These are “high-risk, high-reward” endeavors; they command a margin-accretive premium due to technical complexity but come with strict programme deadlines and meaningful liquidated damages provisions. For Lincotrade, successfully navigating these requirements serves as a “flight-to-quality” signal to the market, positioning them as a preferred partner for Grade A office occupiers and hyperscale developers.
The Tuas Factory: Hidden Value and De-leveraging
A critical component of Lincotrade’s asset-backing is its factory at 5 Tuas Avenue 12. While carried on the books at S13.1 million, the facility holds a bank valuation of approximately S19.0 million. This implies a revaluation surplus of nearly S$6 million, providing a significant boost to the Group’s Net Asset Value (NAV).
Beyond the balance sheet, the factory is a functional profit center:
- Recurring Income: Upon receiving relevant approvals, ~100 dormitory beds are expected to be leased at S450 per bed per month, generating roughly S540,000 in annual recurring rental income.
- Balance Sheet Strength: As Tuas-related capital expenditure concludes, the Group’s financial health is projected to improve significantly, with net gearing expected to drop from 65.4% in 2025 to 38.4% in 2026F.
Crossing the Profit Inflection Point
Financial results from 1H 2026 (the six months ending December 2025) indicate that Lincotrade has crossed a vital inflection point. The S3.9 million net profit achieved in the first half alone has already surpassed the S2.6 million recorded for the entirety of FY2025.
This acceleration is a classic display of operating leverage; as revenue scales toward the S$100 million mark, fixed costs are absorbed more efficiently. For shareholders, this translates into immediate returns. Management has committed to a minimum 40% dividend payout for FY2026—double the formal 20% policy floor—offering a projected dividend yield of 4.5%. Combined with the 14.4% capital upside, the total return profile is increasingly attractive.
Growth by the Numbers
Lincotrade Financial Trajectory (FY2024A – FY2027E)
| Metric | 2024A | 2025A | 2026F | 2027F |
| Revenue (S$’mn) | 67.9 | 73.6 | 104.5 | 112.9 |
| PATMI (Net Profit) (S$’mn) | 2.3 | 2.6 | 6.6 | 6.2 |
| Net Profit Margin (%) | 3.4% | 3.5% | 6.3% | 5.5% |
A Balanced Perspective on Risk
Investors must weigh the growth narrative against the execution risks inherent in the sector:
- Data-Centre Execution: The complexity of these projects means any failure to coordinate specialist MEP (Mechanical, Electrical, and Plumbing) subcontractors could result in liquidated damages and reputational harm.
- Fixed-Price Exposure: With approximately 70% of costs tied to subcontractors, Lincotrade remains exposed to labor shortages and material cost inflation that could compress margins on existing fixed-price contracts.
- Revenue Recognition Timing: Earnings remain sensitive to third-party certifications. Any delay in site handovers or regulatory clearances can push projected revenue into subsequent fiscal periods.
The Path Forward
Lincotrade’s evolution from a niche contractor to a scaled interior fit-out specialist is supported by an unprecedented backlog, margin expansion through high-complexity work, and solid asset backing. By moving toward a more diversified and visible revenue model, the Group has addressed the primary concerns of the skeptical value investor.
As Singapore continues its push to become a regional digital infrastructure hub, the primary question for the long-term observer is: Can Lincotrade maintain its high win rate to replenish this record backlog as the current data center boom reaches its next phase of maturity?
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