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SPH Media Trust (SMT), trading as SPH Media, is a mass media company in Singapore. It was incorporated on July 19, 2021, as a company limited by guarantee , it was a spin off from Singapore Press Holdings as part of a restructuring.
Singapore Press Holdings Limited (SPH) was an organisation with businesses in property and aged care in Singapore. Since its takeover by Cuscaden Peak in 2022, it has been renamed Cuscaden Peak Investments. Prior to 1 December 2021, SPH was in the media business with a reach in the print, digital, radio, and outdoor media.
Mediacorp Pte. Ltd. is the state-owned media conglomerate of Singapore. Owned by Temasek Holdings —the investment arm of the Government of Singapore —it owns and operates television channels, radio , and digital media properties.
Singapore Press Holdings SPH MediaWorks Ltd. ( Chinese : 报业传讯 ; pinyin : bào yè chuán xùn ) was a free-to-air terrestrial television broadcaster in Singapore that operated two television channels: Channel U and Channel i , as well as two radio stations: UFM 1003 and WKRZ 91.3FM .
The STI has a history dating back to its founding in 1966. [1] Following a major sectoral re-classification of listed companies by the Singapore Exchange, which saw the removal of the "industrials" category, the STI replaced the previous Straits Times Industrials Index (abbreviation: STII) and began trading on 31 August 1998 at 885.26 points, in continuation of where the STII left off.
The China Project's subscription package offered "the internet's best birds-eye view of China" for $120 a year, which was still on offer to site visitors on Tuesday, according to a Reuters check.
Zaobao is regarded as pro-Beijing by Western media outlets. [4] [11] The newspaper has included articles from pro-Beijing sources such as People's Daily, [12] HK01, Ming Pao, Global Times, [13] China Times and United Daily News. [14] It is one of the few foreign newspapers allowed in China, where all media is tightly controlled and content ...
On 8 June 2000, SPH, the country’s main newspaper publisher, established a television division called SPH MediaWorks to compete with MediaCorp, which dominated Singapore’s media landscape. [6] On 9 June 2000, the Ministry of Information and the Arts granted MediaCorp a licence to operate a newspaper, which became known as Today .