feed
Home arrow News arrow Legal/General News arrow Where are Asian economies heading?
  • Malaysian Bar Web Ads
  • Malaysian Bar Web Ads
  • Malaysian Bar Web Ads
Where are Asian economies heading? PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 02 December 2008 04:41pm
Image©The Star (Used by Permission)
by Yeow Pooi Ling

Capital Market Summit will seek to provide some answers

IN times of uncertainty and market volatility, people will search for information and views to gauge the direction of the economy.

This is what the 13th Malaysian Capital Market Summit in Kuala Lumpur will try to provide to delegates attending the sessions this Thursday and Friday.

The conference, organised by the Asian Strategy and Leadership Institute, will bring together 20 speakers from Malaysia, Singapore Hong Kong and Switzerland.


Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak will give the keynote address on Thursday.

According to Credit Suisse Asian chief economist Joseph Tan, who is one of the speakers, the current economic crisis raises questions about whether Asia was returning to the same predicament as in the late 1990s.

“The economic situation in South Korea and Indonesia, plus the political instability in Thailand, make people wonder if we’re back to the Asian financial crisis.

“I’ll be walking the delegates through the entire global financial situation and what it means for us in Asia,” Tan said.

His session will also include an analysis on Asia’s financial linkage with the rest of the world and the possibility of contagion for the region.

“What have we done in the past 10 years that will help us in the current situation? Is Asia exposed to other financial risks?” he said, adding that while the global credit crisis had deepened, Asia’s strength relative to its peers was still intact.

“We’re one of the safest spots in the world,” Tan added.

Aberdeen Asset Management Sdn Bhd managing director Gerald Ambrose, who will speak on the first day, said it was important to keep Malaysia’s banking system working by ensuring that liquidity continued to flow.

“Malaysia does not have an inter-bank panic like in Europe or the US but it was proactive on the part of Bank Negara to cut interest rate to keep liquidity going. There was also no need to guarantee deposits but Bank Negara did that too,” he said.

“Malaysia is an open economy; closing it won’t do the trick to counter the current economic crisis,” Ambrose added.

He said while the country’s economic growth was slowing, it was not heading into negative territory.

Meanwhile, Kumpulan Sentiasa Cemerlang Sdn Bhd partner and head of research Choong Khuat Hock will focus his presentation on Malaysia’s debt and equity markets

“The global credit crisis has resulted in a freeze in the capital market. Both equities and bonds have shrunk significantly. Foreign selling in the stock market has led to a huge drop in valuations, which also affected our foreign reserves,” he said.

He added that there was a distortion in value of US dollar-denominated and ringgit-based bonds issued by Malaysian companies.

“The two can have the same credit ratings but are valued differently. US dollar-denominated bonds are higher-priced than the ringgit-based bonds,” Choong added.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
< Prev   Next >
7th LAWASIA Labour Law Conference, Hong Kong (17-18 Sept)
Registration is now open. Visit the Conference official website at http://lawasia.asn.au/labour_law_conference_2010 for more details.
Username Password
Remember Me | Register | Lost Password?

We have 186 guests and 3 members online

Rakyat Service Advertisement 5 @ MyConstitution PerlembagaanKu


Rakyat Service Advertisement 4 @ MyConstitution PerlembagaanKu




show last 4hrs - 24hrs
August 2010 September 2010 October 2010
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
Week 35 1 2 3 4
Week 36 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Week 37 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Week 38 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Week 39 26 27 28 29 30
Google