support@kopiandproperty.com

Advertisement Banner

Highest exports in Oct 2015 since Jan 2014!

I checked. Not even one person shared this piece of news in their Facebook page. I guess this is just too small a news even if every international rating agency would always be looking at export growth before they rate any country. Plus, the exports would determine the trade surplus / deficit and if the country shows a narrowing gap or a deficit, it would get a lower rating and so on. Malaysia’s exports surged to RM75.8bil in October, 2015 and this is the highest ever since January of 2014. Main reasons are due to robust demand from major markets including Asean, China, the EU and the US. The rise in exports were mainly to China, EU, US, Singapore, and Australia.
Malaysia has been having trade surpluses for 216 consecutive months since November 1997. Not a typo, that’s already 18 years of trade surpluses. Does not really sound like a country about to go Greece’s way, right? Total trade surplus for 2015 is RM76.07 billion. While exports grew tremendously, imports are down marginally, by 0.4 percent. Thus, the main reason for the huge surplus is simply because Malaysia is exporting much more. Malaysia imports the most from the following countries: China, US, Taiwan, Thailand and EU. Yes, one missing country would be Singapore. I would have loved it more if Singapore and Malaysia has a much higher trades between us than today.
Latest update: Bank Negara has announced on Monday that it’s international reserves is at RM420.1 billion or equivalent to US$94.6 billion as at Nov 30. This is higher than RM417.2 billion recorded on Nov 13, 2015. The reserves position is sufficient to finance 8.6 months of retained imports and is 1.1 times the short-term external debt.
I remain steadfast with my views that Ringgit is undervalued if we are evaluating Malaysia on the same benchmark(s) with that currency which has been appreciating against majority of all countries in the world. Let’s wish this favourite country of many the best so that rates would be raised within December 2015 itself and continues to be normalised over the next few years. The right action if you believe the worst is not over for Ringgit? Don’t buy properties in places where the prices are already higher than the sky, even if Chinese (China) buyers ask you for advice. Perhaps to ensure flexibility, one can even buy stocks in our southern neighbour. This allows us to hedge against that continuous drop in Ringgit. Happy analyzing and deciding.
written on 4 Dec 2015
Next suggested article: Car prices, going down or up due to Ringgit 

Property Investment always start with knowledge. Equip ourselves with more here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Motion arrow towards right
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Motion arrow towards right
Charles Tan The Founder The Writer Kopiandproperty
Charles Tan

Charles is Founder of kopiandproperty.com He writes from his investment experience for the the past 20 years in investments including property, stock, unit trust and more as well as readings and conversations with many property gurus in the industry. kopiandproperty.com is an independent property blog which is not affiliated to any media company, property developer or even real estate agencies.

Advertisement Banner

Facebook Comment

Table of Contents

Most Recent Posts

join the family

Like us for daily investment news and more

Hit the like

%d bloggers like this: