Economy & Markets
4 min read
Singapore Retail: Foreign Chains' Growing Influence
South China Morning Post
January 20, 2026•2 days ago

AI-Generated SummaryAuto-generated
Singapore's retail ownership data has ignited a debate regarding foreign chains' influence. While foreign-owned businesses represent a small percentage of total retail entities, concerns exist that large foreign brands, particularly from China, might be displacing local businesses. Observers caution that high visibility of popular foreign chains could distort public perception, suggesting they are more dominant than the statistics indicate.
The discourse online centred on what the statistics implied – critics felt that though the proportion of foreign-owned entities, especially from China, might be minuscule, most could actually be big brands with multiple outlets, jostling out smaller local businesses.
Some observers, however, warn that public perception could be warped since popular foreign chains such as Chinese-owned Chagee, Luckin Coffee or Scarlett supermarket occupy places with high footfall and therefore are more visible, giving the impression they may be edging out small local operators.
Gan earlier this month announced the retail numbers – covering food and beverage, clothing, supermarket, as well as pharmaceutical and medicine shops – from the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority, a government body which oversees company registration in Singapore.
The data showed that as of January 8, Singapore residents owned 89.7 per cent, or 40,931 of registered retail businesses in the city state, while business owners who were Chinese nationals accounted for 3 per cent (1,390), followed by Malaysians and Indians who owned about 0.9 per cent each.
The remaining proportion comprised business owners from the United States, Japan, Vietnam and Indonesia.
Rate this article
Login to rate this article
Comments
Please login to comment
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
