
The era of retail investors logging on during lunch breaks to casually place a few stock bets is over. In its place emerged a new class of investors – faster, better informed, and plugged into global markets through AI-powered platforms and community-based tools.
Singapore is becoming a case study in how online trading tools are rewriting the rules.
More Singaporeans are investing in their phones than ever before. But it’s not just about access anymore, it’s about edge.
The quality of tools available to the everyday investor in Singapore is now what you’d expect from a professional trading desk. It’s changing how people invest, and how often. Platforms like TradingView Singapore are changing the game. TradingView gives traders the same market-moving tools once locked behind Bloomberg terminals: real-time data, advanced charting, lightning-fast alerts, and a global feed of insights from millions of users. Add in custom-coded strategies through Pine Script, and you’ve got a platform that doesn’t just react to the market, it helps you anticipate it.
Here’s the twist: while the number of active online traders in Singapore fell slightly, from 264,000 to 248,000 by the end of 2024, the quality of engagement is rising.
According to Investment Trends’ 2024 Singapore Online Investing Report, nearly half of all investors now access educational content daily. A growing number are evaluating risk more seriously, using advanced order types and real-time risk metrics.
This translates to fewer gamblers and more strategists.
Investors are spending more time learning and less time guessing. They’re asking better questions. And the platforms are responding.

This isn’t just a Singapore story. Globally, younger investors are reshaping the market.
A World Economic Forum report from March 2025 found that 30% of Gen Z investors started trading before age 22. That’s double the rate of Millennials and more than triple that of Gen X. Most prefer digital-first platforms, use AI to guide them, and trust community in decision-making.
And they’re driving growth. The online trading platform market hit $10.86 billion globally in 2024 and is forecast to grow to $17.46 billion by 2033, according to IMARC Group. The big drivers of this growth are the platforms that merge education with execution, thanks to AI tools, strong communities, and mobile-first design.
In a high-stakes environment, people want confirmation or at least company.
That’s where social trading comes in.
On these platforms, users can track what top investors are buying and selling in real time. Some integrate social feeds directly into the trading experience, letting users copy portfolios, comment on trades, and learn by watching others.
For new investors, it’s a kind of safety net. Crowd-validated decisions replace blind speculation.
Today’s investors aren’t stopping at stocks. They’re trading options before breakfast, scanning crypto charts at lunch, and toggling between ETFs and forex by dinner. What used to be niche is now normal.
And platforms are racing to keep up. One screen, endless reach. A trader in Singapore can monitor the USD/SGD pair, track Bitcoin’s next breakout, and scan technicals on Japanese equities without missing a beat.
Diversification isn’t just smart. It’s easy. What once required three brokers and a spreadsheet now happens with a tap. Strategy is streamlined. Risk is visualized. And the playbook is wider than ever.
As investor sophistication rises, regulators are stepping in to widen access, but with caution.
In March 2025, Singapore’s Monetary Authority proposed a new framework to allow retail investors access to private market funds, like private equity and infrastructure. The idea is to give individuals more ways to grow wealth, while keeping guardrails in place.
The proposal comes amid concerns that Singapore’s equity markets have grown too shallow, too fast. Retail investors, long sidelined from high-growth sectors, are demanding access, and regulators are listening.
Regtech is booming as a result. The sector is projected to grow 25.6% in Singapore this year alone, hitting $178.92 million, per a report from ResearchAndMarkets.com.
We’re entering an era where access is no longer the bottleneck. The next frontier is making sure people know what they’re getting into.

What we’re seeing isn’t a passing trend. It’s a structural shift in how individuals invest.
Retail traders in Singapore and around the world are trading with smarter tools, better information, and broader access to assets than ever before. They’re not just riding trends. They’re building strategies.
The line between amateur and professional is blurring. And while the platforms may be digital, the shift is deeply human: more confidence, more curiosity, more control.