The EU and Singapore have clinched a free-trade agreement (FTA) - the second
such deal between the 27-nation bloc and a major Asian trading partner.
Last year EU-Singapore trade was worth about 74bn euros ( 60bn; $97bn).
Singapore is the second largest Asian investor in the EU after Japan. The EU
Commission says the deal - not yet signed by politicians - will help EU exports
of cars and financial services.
An EU-South Korea FTA has been in operation since July 2011.
The EU is Singapore's second biggest trade partner after neighbouring Malaysia,
Reuters news agency reports. The plan is to initial the FTA in early 2013.
The EU is also conducting FTA negotiations with Malaysia and Vietnam - like
Singapore, members of the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(Asean).
The new deal is expected to ease EU companies' access to Singapore's banking
and financial services, and to its public procurement markets.
Acceptance of common standards should also help European car exporters - among
the sectors hit especially hard by the current economic downturn.
The EU's trade surplus with Singapore last year was 8bn euros, with cars
accounting for a big slice of the bloc's exports.