Singapore Post

Singapore Post Limited, commonly abbreviated as SingPost, is a postal service and courier company in Singapore. It is the country's designated Public Postal Licensee (PPL) which provides both domestic and international postal services. The company is a wholly owned subsidiary of multinational telecommunications conglomerate Singtel.[1]

Singapore Post
Singapore Post logo

Singapore Post headquarters
Agency overview
Formed1819 (1819) (as Singapore Post Office)
1 April 1992 (1992-04-01) (as Singapore Post)
JurisdictionSingapore
HeadquartersPaya Lebar, Singapore
Agency executives
  • Simon Israel, Chairman
  • Paul William Coutts, Group Chief Executive Officer
Websitewww.singpost.com

The company provides mail collection and delivery services throughout Singapore. Letters and parcels are deposited in a post or parcel boxes or are collected in bulk from businesses, this is then transported to the SingPost sorting offices.

It also provides logistics services in the domestic market and global delivery services. SingPost also offers products and services including postal, agency and financial services through its post offices, Self-service Automated Machines (SAMs) and vPOST, its internet portal. Its headquarters is located in Paya Lebar, Singapore.

As of 2020, Singapore has 59 post offices, 299 Self-service Automated Machines (SAMs), a SAMPLUS, 40 postal agencies and more than 800 licensed stamp vendors. There are also 8,907 postal boxes installed at various locations throughout the city-state.[2][3]

History

Early history

Fullerton Hotel, the former Fort Fullerton where the General Post office was located

Postal Services were available in Singapore since the island was founded by Sir Stamford Raffles in 1819. Initially, mail services were handled by the military authorities and then by the Master Attendant in 1823. The volume of mail was very small in those days and letters were collected and delivered from a single mail office. The Post Office, as it was then known, shared a room with the Master Attendant's Marine Office and the clerk to the Registrar of Import and Export. The whole establishment of the post office in the 1830s consisted of one European clerk, one local writer and a peon.

To cope with the increasing volume of mail, the Post Office, then known as the Singapore Post Office, later General Post Office, was moved in 1854 to its own building near the Town Hall by the side of the Singapore River. Although it was more spacious, there were frequent complaints regarding its location. The Commercial Square (business sector) was on the opposite side of the river, so going to the Post office was inconvenient as one had to cross the river by boat. After 1856, a footbridge was constructed across the river and a toll of 14 cent was levied.

As trade flourished in Singapore and both postal and marine traffic grew heavier, the Post Office was separated from the Marine Office and it became a separate department in October 1858. During the period 1819 and 1858, letters for posting had to be handed in at the Post Office. No postage stamps were used but a register was kept of all letters received at the Post Office and of the names of sailing ships on which they were conveyed.

Stamped receipts were also given for all letters sent to the Post Office for dispatch. For the convenience of the residents, a register was kept of their individual postage accounts on the understanding that all postage due would be regularly settled every month. The first postage stamps were introduced for payment of postage only in 1854. In the early days, the flagstaff at Government Hill (now Fort Canning) was eagerly watched as flying of a flag at daylight, or the firing of a gun at night, signified the arrival of a ship with mail. This infused new life into the quiet community.

On receipt of letters from incoming ships, the Post Office sorters would proceed to register alphabetically all the letters before sending them out through the postmen for delivery. Postal delivery services by means of bullock cart, horse carriage or on foot, were first restricted to the town area. Posting boxes were later installed in the town area for the posting of mail which were then collected by horse-drawn mail coaches.

In 1873, a new General Post office was built on the site of the former Fort Fullerton, a location which was much nearer to the commercial centre of the town. However, the British Government failed to foresee the needs of the future, with the result that the building had to be replaced by another on practically the same site. The new General Post Office was completed in 1885, three years after approval was obtained.

The General Post Office was closed on 23 April 1921. All the equipment were moved to a building on the recently reclaimed land at Collyer Quay, and staff worked at this temporary post office during the construction of Fullerton Building. The post office was transferred back to Fullerton Building on 23 July 1928 and has remained there since.

The latter part of the 19th century marked the modern phase of the development in the history of the Singapore postal service. Services were extended to include a parcel post service, money order and postal order services and a post office savings bank. 1897 saw the establishment of the first sub-post offices, and by 1938, some 20 sub-post offices were already providing decentralised postal facilities on the island. The horse-drawn mail coaches were withdrawn and replaced by motor vans in 1914 as the mail traffic handled steadily increased.

Modern history

In 1982, the Postal Services Department merged with the then Telecommunication Authority of Singapore, also known as Telecoms.

In 1992, the Telecommunication Authority of Singapore was split into three entities:

  1. The reconstituted Telecommunication Authority of Singapore (TAS, now part of the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA))
  2. Singapore Telecommunications Limited (now Singtel) and
  3. Singapore Post Private Limited, an associated company of Singapore Telecommunications (as of Jun 2012).

Singapore Post Limited was listed on the mainboard of the Singapore Exchange (SGX-ST) on 13 May 2003. Singapore Post is the first Public Postal Licensee. TAS granted the licence in 1992 in accordance with section 42 of the Telecommunication Authority of Singapore Act 1992. As a licensee, Singapore Post is empowered to operate postal services with the exclusive privilege of receiving, collecting and delivering letters and postcards from one place to another until 31 March 2007.

SingPost was fined S$100,000 in 2017[4] and S$300,000 in 2018[5] for failing to meet mail delivery standards by IMDA.

Growth

SingPost has made several acquisitions to strengthen and grow its business. In 2009, it acquired the remaining 50% stake in G3 Worldwide Aspac (G3AP),[6] thereby giving the company presence in 10 countries (including Singapore). It also raised its stake in Malaysian Logistics company GDEX to 27% in 2011.[7]

Alibaba bought a 10.35% stake in SingPost for S$312.5 million in May 2014. Both parties also signed an agreement to pursue a joint venture in the business of e-commerce logistics.

In October 2015, SingPost acquired a 96.3 per cent stake in TradeGlobal for US$168.6 million (S$210 million), thereby expanding its e-commerce footprint in the United States.[8]

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See also

References

  1. "SingTel Associated Company". SingTel. Archived from the original on 2 February 2013.
  2. "List of Post Office Locations - Singapore Post". www.singpost.com.
  3. "GOVTECH". www.ida.gov.sg. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  4. Tay, Tiffany Fumiko (7 February 2019). "SingPost fined $100k for failing to meet local mail delivery standards in 2017". The Straits Times. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  5. Tay, Tiffany Fumiko (29 March 2019). "SingPost fined record $300,000 for failing to meet service standards in 2018". The Straits Times. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  6. "SingPost acquires stake in G3 Worldwide Aspac".
  7. "SingPost raises stake in GDEX to 27%".
  8. "SingPost acquires US e-commerce provider TradeGlobal for S$236m". Channel NewsAsia. Archived from the original on 16 October 2015. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
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