logo
Trust in news in Singapore higher than global average, ST is most trusted news brand: report

Trust in news in Singapore higher than global average, ST is most trusted news brand: report

Straits Times17-06-2025
Trust in news here has stayed consistent in the last eight years, and is up slightly from the 42 per cent recorded in 2017. PHOTO: ST FILE
Trust in news in Singapore higher than global average, ST is most trusted news brand: report
SINGAPORE - Singaporeans' trust in the news continues to be higher than the global average, while news avoidance behaviour remained low, according to an annual survey by the Reuters Institute.
It also found that mainstream media outlets remained the most trusted news brands in Singapore, with The Straits Times coming out tops.
The news organisation is trusted by 75 per cent of audiences here, followed by CNA with 74 per cent, and Channel 5 News with 73 per cent, among the 15 brands included in the survey for Singapore.
The Digital News Report surveyed 100,000 people in 48 markets, including 2,014 people in Singapore, and found that 45 per cent here said they trust the news most of the time.
This puts Singapore 15th worldwide, and 3rd in the Asia-Pacific region, behind Thailand (55 per cent) and Hong Kong (52 per cent).
Trust in news here has stayed consistent in the last eight years, and is up slightly from the 42 per cent recorded in 2017.
The survey found that overall trust in the news around the world has kept at 40 per cent for a third year in a row, which is still lower than the 44 per cent recorded in 2021 at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Meanwhile, news avoidance, which typically grows as trust declines, is at the highest level in this year's report by the Oxford-based institute.
Worldwide, some 40 per cent of respondents said they sometimes or often avoid the news, up slightly from 39 per cent in 2024 and 29 per cent in 2017.
The top reasons given by respondents around the world for avoiding news were the negative effect on mood, feeling worn out by the amount of news, and too much coverage of conflict and war.
But the proportion of respondents in Singapore who said they sometimes or often avoid the news was 27 per cent, which was the fifth lowest of the 48 countries and territories surveyed.
Places with the lowest news avoidance were Japan (11 per cent) and Taiwan (21 per cent), while those with the highest news avoidance were Bulgaria (63 per cent), Turkey and Croatia (61 per cent).
The report noted that Singapore's legacy news brands had largely retained or improved their brand trust scores, while alternative and independent outlets still rank lower, partly due to their limited track record and emphasis on viral news.
Audiences of all generations still prize trusted brands with a track record for accuracy, even if they do not use the brands as often as they once did, it added.
The report found that around the world, trusted news brands are the ones that people most frequently turn to when they want to check whether a piece of news or information is true or false, along with official sources.
This year's report included a question about what people do to gauge the veracity of a piece of information, and the biggest proportion of respondents (38 per cent) said they would first look to news outlets they trust, followed by official sources (35 per cent) and fact-checkers (25 per cent).
In Singapore, ST and CNA were tied for the highest offline reach, with 33 per cent of respondents reporting that they used both outlets weekly.
CNA was the most used online news source (47 per cent), followed by Mothership (46 per cent) and the ST website (41 per cent).
Online and social media remain the most common ways of accessing news in Singapore, while both TV and print have declined significantly over the last few years.
Whatsapp (33 per cent) remained as the top social media network people turned to for news in Singapore, though platforms such as YouTube (32 per cent), Instagram (24 per cent) and TikTok (18 per cent) have grown in popularity as news sources compared to the year before.
Data for the report was gathered by research firm YouGov through an online questionnaire, with sampling designed to be nationally representative by age, gender, and region.
The Reuters Institute said that for countries with lower internet penetration, the results should be interpreted as representative of the online population rather than the national population.
The institute also cautioned that its use of a non-probability sampling approach meant it was not possible to compute a conventional margin of error, and that small differences are very unlikely to be statistically significant.
Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Singapore six-month T-bill cut-off yield tumbles from 2% to 1.85%
Singapore six-month T-bill cut-off yield tumbles from 2% to 1.85%

Straits Times

time11 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Singapore six-month T-bill cut-off yield tumbles from 2% to 1.85%

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox This is the eighth consecutive T-bill issuance since March for which yields have declined. SINGAPORE - The cut-off yield on Singapore's latest six-month Treasury bill (T-bill) has tumbled to 1.85 per cent, based on auction results released by the Monetary Authority of Singapore on July 3. This is a decline from the 2 per cent offered in the previous six-month auction that closed on June 19. It is the lowest level that yields have hit in the year to date, and marks the eighth consecutive issuance since March 26 for which yields have declined. T-bills are sold at a discount to their face value. The yield or interest is what you earn from purchasing the T-bill at a discount and holding it until maturity, when you receive the full face value. This is expressed as an annualised percentage. Demand for the latest T-bill tranche rose slightly. The auction received a total of $16.1 billion in applications for the $7.5 billion on offer, representing a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.15. In comparison, the previous auction received a total of $15.9 billion in applications for the $7.5 billion on offer, representing a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.13. The median yield for the latest auction stood at 1.76 per cent, down slightly from 1.95 per cent in the previous round. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore $500 in Child LifeSG credits, Edusave, Post-Sec Education Account top-ups to be disbursed in July Singapore Over 40% of Singaporean seniors have claimed SG60 vouchers: Low Yen Ling Singapore Man to be charged after he allegedly damaged PAP campaign materials on GE2025 Polling Day Singapore $1.46b nickel-trading scam: Ng Yu Zhi's bid for bail midway through trial denied by High Court Asia 4 dead, 30 missing after ferry sinks on way to Indonesia's Bali Singapore Pedestrian-only path rules to be enforced reasonably; focus on errant cyclists: Baey Yam Keng Asia Thai opposition to hold off on no-confidence vote against government Singapore Train service resumes across Bukit Panjang LRT line after power fault led to 3-hour disruption The average yield decreased to 1.64 per cent, from 1.88 per cent previously. All non-competitive bids were allotted, amounting to $1.5 billion, while around 41 per cent of competitive applications at the cut-off yield were allotted.

Hong Kong retailers under strain as changing trends drive store closures
Hong Kong retailers under strain as changing trends drive store closures

Business Times

time14 minutes ago

  • Business Times

Hong Kong retailers under strain as changing trends drive store closures

[HONG KONG] Hong Kong's retailers are battling against shifting consumer habits, as visitors spend less and locals head across the border to China for cheaper dining and shopping, leading to a wave of store closures. A 36-year-old Chinese seafood restaurant chain and a popular high-end food court in the bustling Causeway Bay district closed this week. Other recent closures in the financial hub include cinema chains, a major catering group, a 41-year-old bakery and a three-decade-old congee chain. Weak domestic spending and cheaper prices in Shenzhen, bordering Hong Kong, have compounded retailers' woes, according to industry figures and analysts. Furthermore, China's economic slowdown, US-China geopolitical tensions and a national security clampdown have also weighed on business sentiment and hurt Hong Kong's small and open economy. The city's GDP is forecast to grow between 2 to 3 per cent this year, compared with 2.5 per cent last year and 3.2 per cent in 2023. 'The change in consumption patterns is irreversible,' said Annie Yau Tse, chairwoman of Hong Kong's Retail Management Association. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Hong Kong was once a prime destination for high-spending mainland visitors but mass anti-government protests in 2019 and Covid restrictions led to a decline in its appeal. The authorities have launched initiatives to revive tourism, including hosting large-scale events such as Coldplay concerts and a Manchester United exhibition match at a new harbourside stadium. While visitors are returning to near 2018 levels with May arrivals up 20 per cent to 4.1 million visitors versus five million in 2018, spending remains soft. Retail sales by value rose 2.4 per cent in May from a year earlier to HK$31.3 billion (S$5.1 billion), the first rise in 14 months, government data showed on Wednesday. However, it remains only around 77 per cent of the HK$40.5 billion in May 2018. 'We are trying hard to think of ways to turn the traffic into business,' Yau Tse said. Jack Tong, director of Savills Research & Consultancy, said the recent string of closures was due to a 'structural shift in the local retail market' starting from 2023. It is 'no longer strong enough to support such retail trades and would be beyond repair even by further reducing rents'. Overall prime street rents in the first quarter have fallen back to 2003 levels, he said. 'The rise in local outbound travel in Hong Kong and changes in mainland tourists' spending patterns and preferences in Hong Kong and Macau continued to weigh on the overall retail sector during the financial year,' jeweller Chow Tai Fook said. Last month, Cafe de Coral reported a 29.6 per cent drop in net profit for the 2024/25 year ended in March, citing a weak economy and consumer sentiment. Despite the tough conditions, some signs of recovery are emerging. Vipul Sutariya, who attended the jewellery fair in June, said Chinese dealers were back at the fair 'not to buy immediately but to ask, which is the biggest change in the past 1.5 years', he said. 'In my view, that's a good sign.' REUTERS

US-Vietnam trade deal sows new China uncertainty
US-Vietnam trade deal sows new China uncertainty

Straits Times

time15 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

US-Vietnam trade deal sows new China uncertainty

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The South-east Asian nation has the third-biggest trade surplus with the United States of any country after China and Mexico. HANOI - Vietnam's trade deal with the United States averts the most punishing of US President Donald Trump's 'reciprocal' levies but analysts warned it could provoke a fresh stand-off between Washington and Beijing. The South-east Asian nation has the third-biggest trade surplus with the United States of any country after China and Mexico, and was targeted with one of the highest rates in the US president's 'Liberation Day' tariff blitz on April 2. The deal announced July 2 is the first full pact Mr Trump has sealed with an Asian nation, and analysts say it may give a glimpse of the template Washington will use with other countries still scrambling for accords. The 46 per cent rate due to take effect next week has been averted, with Vietnam set to face a minimum 20 per cent tariff in return for opening its market to US products, including cars. But a 40 per cent tariff will hit goods passing through the country to circumvent steeper trade barriers – a practice called 'transshipping'. Washington has accused Hanoi of relabelling Chinese goods to skirt its tariffs, but raw materials from the world's number two economy are the lifeblood of Vietnam's manufacturing industries . 'From a global perspective, perhaps the most interesting point is that this deal again seems in large part to be about China,' said Capital Economics. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore $500 in Child LifeSG credits, Edusave, Post-Sec Education Account top-ups to be disbursed in July Singapore Over 40% of Singaporean seniors have claimed SG60 vouchers: Low Yen Ling Singapore Man to be charged after he allegedly damaged PAP campaign materials on GE2025 Polling Day Singapore $1.46b nickel-trading scam: Ng Yu Zhi's bid for bail midway through trial denied by High Court Asia 4 dead, 38 missing after ferry sinks on way to Indonesia's Bali Singapore Pedestrian-only path rules to be enforced reasonably; focus on errant cyclists: Baey Yam Keng Asia Thai opposition to hold off on no-confidence vote against government Singapore Train service resumes across Bukit Panjang LRT line after power fault led to 3-hour disruption It said the terms on transshipment 'will be seen as a provocation in Beijing, particularly if similar conditions are included in any other deals agreed over coming days'. 'The looming question' Shares in clothing companies and sport equipment manufacturers - which have a large footprint in Vietnam - rose on news of the deal in New York. But they later declined sharply as details were released. 'This is a much better outcome than a flat 46 per cent tariff, but I wouldn't celebrate just yet,' said Hanoi-based Dan Martin of Asian business advisory firm Dezan Shira & Associates. 'Everything now depends on how the US decides to interpret and enforce the idea of transshipment,' he added. 'If the US takes a broader view and starts questioning products that use foreign parts, even when value is genuinely added in Vietnam, it could end up affecting a lot of companies that are playing by the rules.' Vietnam's government said in a statement late on July 3 that under the deal the country had promised 'preferential market access for US goods, including large-engine cars'. But the statement gave scant detail about the transshipment arrangements in the deal, which Mr Trump announced on his Truth Social platform. Bloomberg Economics forecast Vietnam could lose a quarter of its exports to the United States in the medium term, endangering more than two per cent of its gross domestic product as a result of the agreement. Uncertainty over how transshipping will be 'defined or enforced' is likely to have diplomatic repercussions, said Bloomberg Economics expert Rana Sajedi. 'The looming question now is how China will respond,' she said. 'Beijing has made clear that it would respond to deals that came at the expense of Chinese interests.' 'The decision to agree to a higher tariff on goods deemed to be 'transshipped' through Vietnam may fall in that category,' added Ms Sajedi. 'Any retaliatory steps could have an outsized impact on Vietnam's economy.' AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store