Thursday, 13 December 2018

Malaysia. The Good, the Bad and the Crazy

Was a really big big global hit for Imany a couple of years back.

The good, the bad and the crazy concerning Malaysia are as follows.

The Good. Brent Crude oil looks poised to trade at US$75 a barrel average price next year. Currently is about US$61 a barrel. This should help Malaysia earn some extra dollar gain earnings as petroleum related exports account for 15 per cent of our income.

The Bad. Well, this is not really bad. According to Fitch, the Malaysian Ringgit will be at RM4.33 against the Ringgit in 18 months time. Should help export related companies, but is massive ego dent for us Malaysians .

The Crazy. Anwar Ibrahim. Just last month, he was seen smiling at the parliment lobby with disgraced Tabung Haji supremo Azeez.  Yesterday, according to Nazri Aziz, if Anwar Ibrahim becomes the Prime Minister , then Najib Razak will no longer be shamed with so many court appearance and multiple posting of court bails. And why is this so? Has any of the charges against Najib been made up? Or is Anwar Ibrahim saying under him rule of law will die and the rule of Artificial Intelligence (AI) will prevail? The only person who looks likely to stop Anwar Ibrahim from becoming Prime Minister is AI himself

Thursday, 15 November 2018

Malaysia. High Hopes

Is a current top 30 dance hit for Panic!!at the disco. When Dr Mahathir's Pakatan Harapan swept into power, this nation had high hopes, that we once again will be able to feel prosperity and not merely read about it .

Looks like, Malaysia is on the verge of facing its first real economic test. Like it or not, we are all counting on Dr Mahathir to pull a rabbit out of the hat and save us.

Bloomberg has the story on why, mayhem is about to come calling. Read below :

Malaysia’s Market Calm Rests on Sticky Foundations

The ringgit and stocks have remained relatively stable thanks to the rising price of oil. With that support removed, things could get messy.

By Shuli Ren

Shuli Ren is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Asian markets. She previously wrote on markets for Barron's, following a career as an investment banker, and is a CFA charterholder.

Malaysia’s Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has been lucky, so far.

His country looks to have come out of this year’s emerging-markets rout largely unscathed. The ringgit has fallen only 3.4 percent against the dollar, while the MSCI Malaysia Index has dipped a mere 5.9 percent, compared with a 16 percent slump for the broader emerging-markets gauge.

Beneath the calm is a steady exodus by foreign investors, though. They started selling Malaysian bonds as soon as Mahathir won the May election, driving cumulative withdrawals this year to almost $3 billion.

Mahathir Slump

Foreign bond investors quickened the pace of selling after Malaysia's elections in early May

Source: Bloomberg

To plug the hole, the government is increasingly relying on local demand, by issuing sukuk, or bonds that comply with Islamic law. As of 2017, the $195 billion Employees Provident Fund had 23 percent of its assets allocated to government debt, from only 18 percent three years earlier.

Rise Of Islamic Bonds

Local banks and pension funds are replacing foreigners as buyers of government bonds, while Malaysia is relying on sukuk issues to cater to local demand

Source: Morgan Stanley

Note: 2018 as of September.

One can’t help questioning whether Malaysia can become self-reliant. Mahathir certainly thinks so, having canceled the Chinese-funded East Coast Rail Link after campaigning against undue influence from the nation. That decision alienated Beijing, a driving force behind foreign direct investment in Malaysia in recent years.

But foreigners still owned about 23 percent of Malaysian government bonds as of September — a high proportion by international standards. These investors are being spooked by the prospect of a twin deficit, a taboo that Mahathir is testing.

The country is pushing its budget deficit to the highest in five years. Meanwhile, its current account surplus will undoubtedly narrow if the bear market in oil persists.

Mounting Debt

Malaysia expects its fiscal deficit to reach a five-year high as a share of GDP

To be sure, Mahathir was dealt a bad hand by the government of his predecessor Najib Razak. Collectively, the 70 billion ringgit ($16.7 billion) he needs to shell out to service tax refunds and debt payments on behalf of troubled state fund 1MDB account for 30 percent of government income. 

The new government is adding to the pressure, though. Mahathir repealed a 6 percent goods and services tax that contributed about 20 percent of the government’s total income last year. 

The tax burden will fall instead on state-owned oil and gas giant Petroliam Nasional Berhad. The government plans to claw out 54 billion ringgit in dividends from Petronas next year, double the 26 billion ringgit it received in 2018. That’s a big ask, given the company’s 93 percent payout ratio and falling oil prices.

National Service

Malaysia wants Petronas to more than double its dividend next year, which would probably raise its payout ratio above 100 percent

To make matters worse, similarly rated oil exporters from the Gulf will be entering JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s emerging-markets government bond indexes next year. Unlike Malaysia, Saudi Arabia is narrowing its fiscal deficit faster than expected, while Abu Dhabi will record a surplus soon.

Meanwhile, putting a larger share of Malaysia’s pension fund into fixed-income may not be serving the country’s interests. Most of the world, including Japan and South Korea, is walking the other way. The best-performing pension funds last year had the highest proportionof assets in equities, according to a recent study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Malaysia’s calm has been underpinned by rising prices for its oil exports. As the black gold hits the skids, we may start to see what a fragile veneer that was.

Monday, 12 November 2018

Ringgit Malaysia. Electricity

Is the hit from Silk City and Dua Lipa. Looks like the electricity has hit the Ringgit. The currency touched RM4.20 to the US Dollar today, before easing to RM4.19.

This is just the begining....the voltage hasn't hit top notch yet, and even the Rupiah has become a bit more expensive.

Tuesday, 30 October 2018

Stock market. Firestone

Is the hit from Kygo. For those of you who believe that the 400 point upward swing by the Dow Jones, means that the equity markets have stabilised, please think again.
In Malaysia, the situation is actually more chronic, with RM10 billion net outflow in the first ten months of the year, which comes up to RM1 billion a month or RM30 million a day for every single day of the month.
There is a Firestone about to hit us.
Read MarketWatch from the godfather himself :


‘Godfather’ of chart analysis says ‘damage done to the stock market’ is much, much worse’ than anyone is talking about

Acampora tells MarketWatch that the action under way in the stock market reminds him of the 1987 crash

Ralph Acampora is bearish on stocks

Prominent market technician Ralph Acampora says the stock market is in bad shape and it’s worse than many on Wall Street investors appreciate.

A pioneer in the field of chart-based trading, Acampora said the technical damage that has resulted in the Dow Jones Industrial AverageDJIA+1.77% and the S&P 500 index SPX+1.57% erasing all of their gains for 2018, and the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP+1.58%falling into correction territory—usually characterized as a decline of at least 10% from a recent peak—will take months to repair.

“From a technical perspective, the damage that has been done technically to the stock market is much, much worse than people are talking about,” he told MarketWatch in a phone interview on Tuesday.

Acampora cited a break down of so-called FANG stocks—a quartet of technology and internet-related companies that include Facebook Inc. FB+2.91% Amazon.com Inc.AMZN-0.55% Netflix Inc.NFLX+0.34% and Google-parent Alphabet Inc. GOOGL+1.43% —as the clearest sign that the worm has turned on the bull market.

On Monday, those names, which have been significant catalysts for market sentiment and price moves, shed a combined $120 billion in market value. On top of that, Amazon became the most recent of that group to close in bear-market territory, defined as drop of at least 20% from a recent peak.

“I’ve been a bull for a long, long time and like everyone, I was waiting for a correction but this is something different,” said Acampora, who many chartists refer to as the “godfather” of technical analysis.

Monday, 29 October 2018

Ringgit Malaysia. Venom

Is a hit now in the UK for rapper Eminem. On September 30th, I wrote the Ringgit would trade at RM4.18 against the US Dollar the following week.
I won't spit any venom, because the Ringgit did not fall to RM4.18 against the dollar anytime between October 1 and October 7th.
22 days latter though, it's a different story. The Ringgit now is at RM4.18 to the dollar, and the sun doesn't seem like it will rise anytime soon underneath the redeemer and the sky.
But, you can be assured that at this level there is more to come and plenty of VENOM!!!

Saturday, 20 October 2018

MyEG + Datasonic : IRIS

Is the smash hit from 20 years ago from the goo goo dolls. With the MACC saying that it has not cleared any company (MyEG & Datasonic) with regards to the corruption case of Zahid Hamidi, expect a killing field on Monday.

If nothing happens within the next 39 hours, to clear Datasonic & MyEG, the knives will be out on Monday.

All this will only benefit IRIS, which currently trades at 17 Sen. 

The Star has the story, which has basically placed MyEG & Datasonic in a COFFIN. Read below : 


KUALA LUMPUR (Bernama): The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) will investigate all the companies involved in the case of Umno president Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi who was charged with abuse of power and corruption on Friday (Oct 19).

MACC deputy chief commissioner (operations) Datuk Seri Azam Baki said any company and person involved in corrupt activities will not escape investigation.

"We investigate whoever is involved in corruption, so far one company has said they are not involved... it is up to them to say. The clarification will come from MACC, if our investigation shows that the company is not involved in any corruption, they are not guilty," he told reporters after the IBR oath-taking ceremony of the Badminton Association of Malaysia (BAM) at the Malaysian Badminton Academy here Saturday (Oct 20).



Wednesday, 10 October 2018

2019. Rock you like a hurricane

Is the massive 1984 hit by the Scorpions. We all know by now that the Dow Jones has been rocked like a hurricane, with the index falling by more than 800 points.

The Dow now is in bear territory but don't expect a big index effect on the local stock market. For sure MMC and Gamuda will get hit. Pentmaster and Frontken will also see some pressure.

There is one stock though, which won't be moving up or down this round. I shall write more about this stock latter now.

For now, she is resting in order to rock you like a hurricane in 2019.