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Strategies & Market Trends : Asia Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Stitch who wrote (7617)11/29/1998 8:44:00 PM
From: Dayuhan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9980
 
Stitch,

More of the same...


Malaysian Economy Contracts by 8.6%

'Downward Spiral' Has Not Stopped Yet

By Thomas Fuller International Herald Tribune

KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysian economic output fell by 8.6 percent in
the third quarter compared with the period a year ago, its worst
performance ever, dashing hopes that stimulus measures carried out this year had helped stem the economic slide.

''The downward spiral has not been arrested yet,'' said Mohamad Ariff,
executive director of the Malaysian Institute of Economic Research. ''I think there will be a massive contraction this year.''

Officials at Bank Negara, the central bank, were more hopeful. ''The latest indicators suggest the contraction in the economy has bottomed out,'' the bank's governor, Ali Abul Hassan Sulaiman, said after the figures were released Saturday. The economy expanded by 2.3 percent when compared with the second quarter, he said, adding that car sales rose, banks were lending more and exports sharply increased in September.

It was the third consecutive quarterly contraction in gross domestic product compared with the corresponding period last year. The economy shrank by 6.8 percent in the second quarter and by 2.8 percent in the first quarter.

Malaysian economic performance has been closely watched around the
region since June, when the country broke with the orthodoxy of the
International Monetary Fund and abandoned austerity measures in favor of a stimulus package. The government has been prodding banks to increase lending and has used cash from its national provident fund and the state oil company to help relieve troubled companies of their debt.

The country also imposed controls on its currency, allowing it to lower interest rates while protecting against capital flight. Analysts said it was too early to judge how the controls had affected growth - they were imposed in September, the end of the third quarter. The government says the controls - which fixed the value of the dollar at 3.8 ringgit - have lifted currency reserves and helped restore market stability.

Some analysts are more skeptical.

''All the positive effects of the policy, like low interest rates, trade surpluses and increased reserves, are also taking place in other countries where there are no capital controls,'' Mr. Ariff said.

Although there are signs throughout Southeast Asia of economic recovery, such as buoyant stock markets and rising car sales, third-quarter data have been universally negative. Hong Kong's economy contracted at a 7 percent annual rate, South Korea's declined at a 6.8 percent rate and Indonesia's shrank at a 17.4 percent rate, while the Philippine economy contracted 0.1 percent in the third quarter from the second, and Singapore's shrank 0.7 percent. Thailand does not issue third-quarter data, but analysts have estimated the economy will contract by more than 7 percent this year.

Most worrying for Malaysia are investment data. While proposals for new investment are increasing in South Korea and Thailand, they have
plummeted in Malaysia. Investment proposals dropped 57 percent in the
first nine months of the year, according to the Malaysian Institute of
Economic Research. Local investment proposals dropped by 72 percent,
and foreign direct-investment proposals fell 28 percent.

Meanwhile, there are signs that Malaysia may change its peg to the dollar if currencies in neighboring countries continue to appreciate. In recent weeks, the Philippine peso, the Thai baht, the Indonesian rupiah and the Singapore dollar have all risen sharply against the U.S. dollar.

Prime Minister Mahathir bin Mohamad last week told members of the
Japanese Keidanren, or Federation of Economic Organizations, that Kuala Lumpur would consider the changing the peg only if regional currencies moved 20 percent ''either up or down,'' Kumagai Naohiko, vice chairman of the Keidanren, told Bridge News.





To: Stitch who wrote (7617)12/2/1998 5:20:00 AM
From: Michael Sphar  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9980
 
Reflecting on tonight's Stratfor report:

<< Oil Producers' Threats to Flood Market May Force U.S. Response >>
Mexico/Venezuela/United States

Paints an immediately bleak picture for all OPEC and non-OPEC oil producing nations. If this MOTHER OF ALL GAS PRICE WARS continues as implied, there will be severe dislocations in the more marginal oil producing countries. Obviously supply exceeds demand. And since Asia turned down their collective demand due to the "Asian Crisis" in the years past that has only exacerbated the issue.

Do you see any sign of lowered gas prices in KL recently ? Any increase in its use, ie any stimulation to the local economy that lowered costs of gas and oil might be benefiting your part of the world ? Or is this a left hand/right hand thing given that Malaysia is also an oil producing nation ? Has the black gold lost its luster ? Will Harley hogs become the motorcycle of choice for cruising Malaysian highways and hinterlands ?

Here in Silicon Valley, the price of a gallon of gas has finally started to catch up with the drop experienced elsewhere in the US over last year. In my travels last week I noted that cheapest pump price in the local region was $1.02 per gal, discounting about 45 cents for various taxation interests, that means consumers around here are paying approx 57 cents a gallon raw gas. That's incredibly cheap compared to historical pricing vis a vis today's earning power.

Perhaps this is part of the benign deflation that "feels good" to the consumer, but masks the global pain of producer nations/regions. I recall a very astute poster on another thread, former New Zealand based oil engineering type claiming the earth to be awash in oil and that producers would have to endure production declines or per barrel revenue declines all this before the start of turmoil in Thailand leading to Asian Contagion. Seems like his far reaching forecast was right in spades.

Is there any good news in this ? Or am I just to feel guilty now that I can shave a couple bucks off each twenty I pay for a fill-up ? Seems like the sins of governmental guidance directing the invisible hands steering the oil producers are becoming exposed around the world. Now Stratfor is looking for US intervention to assist its beleaguered New World oil suppliers. Adam Smith where are you ?