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MALAYSIA Tanah Tumpah Darahku

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10 APRIL 2024

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Malaysian Economy In Really Deep Trouble Says The Wall Street Journal.

Image result for Malaysia economy down and in trouble

Malaysia’s Vulnerability Exposed by Dollar’s Ascent


17-Dec-2016 Intellasia | WSJ  

(My comments: Hey let's sue the WSJ again. Ha ha ha. The WSJ has done it again. They have given facts and figures.)

Foreign investors are fleeing the country’s stock and bond markets   


Malaysia has been one of Asia’s worst-hit economies amid the continued climb of US interest rates and the dollar.
Foreign investors sold $5.3 billion of Malaysian stocks and bonds in November, the largest monthly outflow since September 2011, according to ANZ Bank. That is almost a quarter of the $22.1 billion pulled from emerging markets in the region, excluding China.

The bulk of the selling was in Malaysia’s bond market. The $4.5 billion of bonds sold by foreigners in November, in ringgit terms, marks the biggest monthly debt outflow on record, according to ANZ.
The ringgit was one of Asia’s worst-performing currencies in the aftermath of the US election, and Malaysia’s central bank has been tapping the country’s already low level of reserves to support it. Last month, Bank Negara clamped down on offshore currency speculators, a worrying echo of its maneuvers to stem capital outflows during the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s.

Despite the government’s various attempts to support the currency, the ringgit has lost 6.5 percent of its value against the greenback since the US election, hitting a nearly 19-year low on November 30. On Thursday, the currency weakened 0.9 percent, following the Federal Reserve’s announcement of its first rate increase in 2016.
Malaysia’s Achilles’ heel is the high level of foreign ownership of its government bonds. Foreign money is flighty, a factor that can accelerate a liquidity crunch during times of stress. While the latest rash of selling cut the proportion of foreign ownership to 48 percent in November from 52 percent a month earlier, the percentage is still very high for an emerging market.

My comments : 

Don't worry. 
The Red Shirts cannot u'stand any of this. 
The kampong people can't ustand anything. 
The Dumbnos certainly can't ustand any of this. 

Just ignore the WSJ ok. Only about 10 million educated and highly placed people read the WSJ everyday. 

Not relevant. It's a chicken shit Third World country anyway. 

'Cebuk dale sungai' village idiots being led by 'Bukit Tak Untung New Village' wannabes.



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