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The ringgit retreated against the greenback at the close today as investors reassessed the US interest rate outlook foll...
19/09/2025

The ringgit retreated against the greenback at the close today as investors reassessed the US interest rate outlook following the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) interest rate cut yesterday, an economist said.
Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Afzanizam Rashid said the local currency saw some correction due to uncertainty over the US interest rate outlook, although the US federal open market committee (FOMC) cut its key rate by 25 basis points last night.

The US benchmark lending rates now range between 4% and 4.25%.

The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission’s (MACC) application to forfeit seized cash linked to former prime minister Ism...
15/09/2025

The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission’s (MACC) application to forfeit seized cash linked to former prime minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob and his former political secretary Anuar Yunus was made in accordance with the applicable laws, the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) said today.
In a statement, the AGC stressed that asset forfeiture proceedings and criminal charges are two distinct processes.

The AGC said it is currently reviewing a full investigation report from MACC on the cash that was seized in February before any decision on criminal prosecution can be made.

Bermaz Auto’s shares have plummeted nearly 62% year to date, wiping over RM1 billion off its market capitalisation. (Ber...
14/09/2025

Bermaz Auto’s shares have plummeted nearly 62% year to date, wiping over RM1 billion off its market capitalisation. (Bernama pic)
PETALING JAYA: Bermaz Auto Bhd shares tumbled to a record low after the Mazda and Kia cars distributor’s first quarter net profit plunged 88% in the face of stiff competition from Chinese automakers.
With investors and analysts turning bearish, the stock fell as much as 10.4% or 7 sen to 60 sen. It closed 9.6% lower at 61 sen, valuing the group at RM715 million.

It has plummeted nearly 62% year to date, wiping over RM1 billion off its market capitalisation.

Five directors of a fire protection equipment company have been fined RM400,000 each for breaching Bursa Malaysia Securi...
13/09/2025

Five directors of a fire protection equipment company have been fined RM400,000 each for breaching Bursa Malaysia Securities Bhd’s main market listing requirements for failing to make an immediate announcement of an acquisition.
The directors, who were named as Sok One Esen, Hoo Swee Guan, Gan Chow Tee, Wong Kok Seong and Kho See Yiing, had also allowed a misleading and false statement to be made that the acquisitions were not subject to shareholder approval.

The company, Fitters Diversified Bhd, was also publicly reprimanded by the stock exchange for failing to make an immediate announcement in March 2023 regarding the acquisitions by its wholly owned subsidiary, Fitters Development Property Sdn Bhd.

Asia’s aluminium market holds strong as LME stocks plunge in MalaysiaAluminium prices in Asia are holding firm near USD ...
12/09/2025

Asia’s aluminium market holds strong as LME stocks plunge in Malaysia

Aluminium prices in Asia are holding firm near USD 2,615 a tonne, supported by a rush of withdrawals from London Metal Exchange (LME) warehouses that has tightened supply across the region. Almost 100,000 tonnes were requested for removal from Malaysian depots in just two days, traders said, cutting into inventories that had recently touched a 14-month high.

The sudden drawdown has reduced immediately available stocks and left buyers competing for fewer tonnes of deliverable metal. Analysts view the move as a strategic push by trading houses to lock in physical supply at a time of persistent uncertainty.

Market attention has zeroed in on Malaysia, now the focal point of the latest stock shifts. The country’s warehouses play a pivotal role in the Asian aluminium trade, and the wave of withdrawals is being linked to seasonal demand from regional manufacturers. “When metal disappears from the system that quickly, it usually signals tighter conditions ahead,” one Singapore-based trader said.

Trading houses and LME rules

This year’s trading has already been marked by volatility. In June, Bloomberg reported that Mercuria Energy Group controlled more than 90 per cent of the aluminium on warrant, raising concerns about market distortions. The concentration forced the LME to act, introducing rules that compel holders of large futures positions to lend them back at capped rates to prevent supply squeezes.

Also read: Indian brands to slash prices: Almost all AL-inclusive goods are cheaper with 'GST 2.0' revised rates

Underlying supply stains

Even without the latest warehouse drama, aluminium supply remains stretched. Energy accounts for as much as 40 per cent of smelting costs, and elevated power prices in major producing regions have curbed output. Environmental rules in China and elsewhere have also limited production growth, while shipping delays and port congestion continue to distort trade flows and push up regional premiums.

Aluminium vs other metals

The metal’s resilience stands out against a softer backdrop for base metals. On September 9, aluminium was unchanged at USD 2,615 a tonne, copper hovered near USD 9,925, and other metals slipped. Analysts said aluminium’s strength reflects specific supply-demand drivers rather than broad commodity sentiment.

Technical indicators point to support near USD 2,615 and resistance around USD 2,656. Market participants say the next move will hinge on whether withdrawals continue, how smelters handle rising energy costs, and the strength of demand from China’s factories.

Ripple effects across Asia

Higher aluminium prices are already feeding through supply chains. Carmakers face rising costs as lightweight alloys become more expensive, construction budgets are under pressure from pricier frames and panels, and consumer-goods producers are bracing for costlier cans and electronics components.

For producers, the story is different. Countries with bauxite, alumina and smelting capacity are benefiting from stronger revenues and healthier trade balances.

Spree in Malaysia has drained the system of deliverable aluminium and highlighted how fragile supplies remain. With inventories still low by historical standards and production facing energy and environmental constraints, prices are likely to stay supported — even as regulators work to prevent a repeat of this year’s market distortions.

Coming soon, exclusively on AL Circle: The World of Aluminium Extrusions – Industry Forecast to 2032

Bursa Malaysia ends firmer as Fed rate cut expectations buoy sentimentKUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia ended trading on a po...
10/09/2025

Bursa Malaysia ends firmer as Fed rate cut expectations buoy sentiment

KUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia ended trading on a positive note today, marking its third consecutive day of gains in line with other major Asian bourses.

The regional markets closed higher on optimism that signs of softness in the United States labour market could prompt the US Federal Reserve to deliver at least a quarter-point rate cut next week.

At 5 pm, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) gained 3.94 points to 1,590.75 from Tuesday’s close of 1,586.81.

The index had opened 1.23 points firmer at 1,588.04 and moved between 1,585.21 and 1,590.80 throughout today’s trading session.

In the broader market, gainers beat decliners 518 to 487, while 506 counters were unchanged, with 1,082 untraded and eight suspended.

Turnover, however, trimmed to 2.66 billion units worth RM2.29 billion from 3.01 billion units worth RM2.61 billion yesterday.

Rakuten Trade Sdn Bhd vice-president of equity research Thong Pak Leng said the benchmark index has managed to hold above key support levels and continues to display resilience after the August rally.

"This shows that buying interest is still present even though the pace has slowed slightly. The key breakout level to monitor is the 1,600 resistance whereby a decisive close above this level with stronger volume would validate fresh upside momentum and open the path towards the 1,620-1,650 zone,” he told Bernama.

He anticipates the FBM KLCI to trend within the range of 1,570-1,600 for the rest of the week.

Elsewhere, at the time of writing, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 1.01 per cent to 26,200.26, Singapore Strait Times Index advanced 1.23 per cent to 4,350.62, South Korea’s Kospi added 1.67 per cent to 3,314.53 and Japan’s Nikkei 225 perked up by 0.87 per cent to 43,837.67.

Among the heavyweights, Maybank was down seven sen to RM9.97, Public Bank increased one sen to RM4.30, CIMB gained five sen to RM7.21, Tenaga Nasional was eight sen higher to RM13.18, IHH Healthcare was 16 sen better at RM7.10 and Press Metal was up nine sen to RM5.62.

For active stocks, VS Industry erased 10 sen to 54 sen, Classita added one sen to 9.5 sen, Pharmaniaga perked up half-a-sen to 22 sen, Zetrix AI increased one sen to 86.5 sen, Tanco was 1.5 sen better at 80 sen and 99 Speedmart was down three sen to RM2.49.

Top gainers for the day were led by Riverview, earning 20 sen to RM3.00, LPI Capital was 18 sen higher at RM14.46 and Ranhill Utilities improved 13 sen to RM1.90.

Nestle and Malaysian Pacific Industries were the top losers, dropping 60 sen and 30 sen to RM95.50 and RM27.70 respectively.

On the index board, the FBM Emas Index rose 13.61 points to 11,786.45, the FBMT 100 Index added 13.98 points to 11,551.46, and the FBM Emas Shariah Index improved 23.86 points to 11,769.92.

The FBM 70 Index fell 45.03 points to 16,423.33, while the FBM ACE Index earned 7.26 points to 4,728.10.

By sector, the Financial Services Index lost 35.17 points to 18,092.15, the Industrial Products and Services Index edged down 1.15 points to 164.08, the Plantation Index edged up 13.35 points to 7,682.13, while the Energy Index slipped 0.33 of a point to 740.06.

The Main Market volume slipped to 1.46 billion units valued at RM2.04 billion from 1.49 billion units valued at RM2.29 billion on Tuesday.

Warrant turnover declined to 945.49 million units worth RM151.63 million from 1.20 billion units worth RM1.99 billion previously.

The ACE Market volume dropped to 257.12 million worth RM102.18 million from 317.83 million worth RM123.19 million.

Consumer products and services counters accounted for 288.93 million shares traded on the Main Market, industrial products and services (331.55 million), construction (109.01 million), technology (141.3 million), financial services (78.47 million), property (137.03 million), plantation (29.61 million), REITs (25.82 million), closed/fund (24,400), energy (93.46 million), healthcare (102.61 million), telecommunications and media (60.17 million), transportation and logistics (21.49 million), utilities (35.94 million), and business trusts (59,800). - Bernama

Countering Digital Authoritarianism: How Malaysia Can Secure Digital Sovereignty by Tokenizing Trade FinanceIn an era of...
10/09/2025

Countering Digital Authoritarianism: How Malaysia Can Secure Digital Sovereignty by Tokenizing Trade Finance

In an era of intensifying strategic competition and hybrid threats, digital infrastructure has become a new battlespace domain. Trade finance, typically seen as a bureaucratic and purely economic function, is now a potential vector for influence, coercion, and strategic dependencies. This challenge is particularly critical for growing mid-sized economies like Malaysia, whose location and industrial base place it at the center of Indo-Pacific supply chains, making digital infrastructure sovereignty a necessity in this context.

As China increasingly exports key building blocks for digital infrastructure, including semiconductors, 5G, and data center capacity under the guise of economic development, Malaysia faces a critical inflection point on whether it should integrate these technologies into its current trade ecosystems, especially considering China’s long-standing status as Malaysia’s largest trading partner.

This is also critical given today’s contested digital landscape, with economic platforms being a crucial emerging component of national defense. In this case, critical financial infrastructure would form a key part of a country’s national resilience framework. In this case, tokenizing trade finance on its own offers a path for Malaysia to secure its own digital autonomy and insulate itself against coercive influence in the ever-prevalent digital world.

Trade Finance as a Geopolitical Vulnerability
Tokenization in trade finance refers to converting traditional trade documents and financial instruments, such as invoices, letters of credit, or bills of lading, into digital tokens on a secure blockchain, which is a decentralized, tamper-proof ledger maintained by a distributed network of computers. This allows for instant, verifiable, and programmable value transfer.

While this technology is often framed as a fintech solution, it holds critical strategic value as it reduces exposure to digital choke points, limits undue data transfer risks, and decentralizes liquidity flows in times of economic stress or sanctions. In this respect, tokenized trade finance better enables equal footing for parties participating in a transaction, bypassing the traditional cumbersome systems that place significant emphasis on intermediaries and trust. Crucially, by leveraging a distributed ledger, tokenizing trade finance resists single points of failure, making it more resilient to external pressures than traditionally centralized systems.

Malaysian micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), the key drivers of trade finance in Malaysia, are currently extremely reliant on manual, paper-based processes. Despite the country’s relatively robust digital retail payments industry, enabled by platforms such as Touch ‘n Go and Maybank’s MAE, its trade finance sector remains fragmented and split between analog and digital implementation. A prime example of this can be seen in the rollout of mandatory e-invoicing and digital tax reporting tools in mid-2024. While a positive step toward modernization, this effort has seen uneven adoption, with many businesses struggling to align these new systems with legacy workflows, resulting in errors and delays in settlements.

Therefore, this mismatch between domestic digital innovation and enterprise-level infrastructure creates an exploitable vulnerability for Malaysia. In the event of a geopolitical dispute, threat actors could exploit these digital gaps through transactional blockades, data theft, or even ransomware attacks, disrupting cross-border trade flows. Therefore, ensuring digital infrastructure sovereignty is extremely important for Malaysia, particularly as supply chains become key battlegrounds for influence and coercion.

BRICS and the Challenge of Digital Infrastructure Sovereignty
The proposed BRICS Pay infrastructure, alongside digital infrastructure initiatives such as the Blockchain Service Network (BSN) and the possibility of Belt and Road Initiative-linked stablecoins, represent China’s increasing utilization of infrastructure tools as instruments of influence. This is particularly concerning for Malaysia, since, by default, these tools would come with governance models that reflect an authoritarian digital economy, a system where the government would exercise ultimate control over all data and digital platforms to the detriment of user privacy and innovation. As a result, countries that adopt them risk becoming locked into asymmetric dependencies with China, potentially affecting national data sovereignty and even economic continuity.

However, the launch of the national Malaysian Blockchain Infrastructure (MBI) in April 2025, a live digital asset sandbox, alongside its efforts to work with regional partners like Singapore through SGTraDex, showcases Malaysia’s desire for digital sovereignty, with its decentralized homegrown platforms serving as a key countermeasure to reliance on centralized foreign systems.

Economic Statecraft Through Tokenization
Tokenizing trade finance will enable Malaysia to maintain strategic ambiguity in its partnerships while avoiding digital dependencies. Additionally, this move could enable businesses to access new liquidity pools, including alternative and decentralized finance (DeFi) providers, within financing systems that are not overly dependent on any single external financial architecture. This fulfills a significant gap for Malaysian MSMEs today, with the MSME funding gap standing at $21.5b, which is equivalent to around 5% of Malaysia’s GDP.

To this end, Malaysia’s Securities Commission unveiled a proposal for tokenizing capital market products in mid-2025 and has since announced a digital asset regulatory sandbox. When combined with Malaysia’s existing global leadership in Islamic finance, tokenized instruments such as a proposed cross-border smart sukuk could enable greater financial inclusion on a global basis, with smart sukuks being Shariah-compliant bond-like financial instruments projected to be worth over $1t in 2025. In this case, smart contracts would automate and enforce Shariah concepts, enabling Malaysian-based financial innovation with both religious and strategic legitimacy.

Securing Malaysia’s Digital Infrastructure
In late 2024, Malaysia gained “partner country” status in BRICS, with cross-border yuan transactions growing 27% in Q1 2025. With China continuing to be Malaysia’s largest economic partner, Malaysia’s participation in BRICS does introduce the threat of subtle entanglement through digital platforms. A tokenized domestically-governed digital finance architecture gives Malaysia a hedge against these possibilities, enabling continuous cross-border trade despite the threat of sanctions, payment blockades, or the withdrawal of digital services by foreign entities.

Ensuring digital infrastructure sovereignty will help Malaysia secure its economic future. This is especially critical due to the increasing prevalence of supply chains, data, and economics in today’s definition of conflict, highlighting a distinct need for economic participation, continuity, and simultaneous national resiliency in light of gray zone conflict.

Malaysia’s 2020 blockchain pilot in palm oil supply chain traceability shows its early interest in applying blockchain to its national growth priorities. These capabilities could be drawn upon for expansion if tokenized trade finance becomes widespread, with use-cases including commodities, halal trade, and green finance, making Malaysia a credible standard-setter for secure, transparent, and Shariah-compliant trade systems.

Conclusion
As digital ecosystems become tools of geopolitical influence, Malaysia has a chance to lead in not only ensuring its own digital infrastructure sovereignty but also in securing its economic future. Tokenized trade finance is one key way that Malaysia can continue to grow economically while still engaging with China and other ASEAN nations. Additionally, securing digital sovereignty is a pillar of Malaysia’s broader national security strategy, with the ability to safeguard economic flows and assert control over digital infrastructure being key in this respect.

All in all, Malaysia could become a model for other mid-sized economies pursuing increased economic growth while maintaining digital infrastructure sovereignty, with trade finance tokenization providing Malaysia the unique opportunity to benefit from strategic competition without being consumed by it.

Bursa Malaysia seen trading range-boundKUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia is expected to remain range-bound with a slight upwa...
09/09/2025

Bursa Malaysia seen trading range-bound

KUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia is expected to remain range-bound with a slight upward bias this week, as investors await new catalysts to determine the market’s direction.

Rakuten Trade Sdn Bhd vice-president of equity research Thong Pak Leng sees the benchmark index maintaining its sideways pattern with a mild upward bias until fresh drivers emerge.

“We anticipate the index to trend within the 1,570 to 1,600-point range next week, representing its support and resistance levels,” he told Bernama.

Thong noted that the benchmark index hovered between 1,570 and 1,580 points last week, consolidating as the absence of new catalysts and ongoing foreign outflows limited upside momentum.

This week, market players will be eyeing new economic data, including Malaysia’s industrial production and manufacturing sales value

Meanwhile, in the United States, key releases include the consumer price index, producer price index and initial jobless claims.

On a weekly basis, the FBM KLCI rose 3.03 points to 1,578.15 last Thursday from 1,575.12 the previous Friday.

Weekly turnover fell to 7.92 billion units worth RM7.89bil from 16.30 billion units worth RM18.65bil in the previous week. — Bernama

HKD2.1B Southbound Trading Net Inflow to BABA-WThere was HKD2.1 billion, HKD2 billion and HKD1.4 billion Southbound Trad...
08/09/2025

HKD2.1B Southbound Trading Net Inflow to BABA-W

There was HKD2.1 billion, HKD2 billion and HKD1.4 billion Southbound Trading net inflow to BABA-W (09988.HK) +2.000 (+1.541%) Short selling $3.57B; Ratio 21.402% , MEITUAN-W (03690.HK) +1.600 (+1.578%) Short selling $894.75M; Ratio 8.517% and HORIZONROBOT-W (09660.HK) +0.820 (+9.121%) Short selling $1.93B; Ratio 27.794% .

There was HKD576.5 million Southbound Trading net outflow from 3SBIO (01530.HK) +5.500 (+18.236%) Short selling $134.23M; Ratio 3.587% .

Related NewsCCBI Elevates BABA-W (09988.HK) TP to $161.7, Rating Outperform

For Southbound Trading of Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect, BABA-W (09988.HK) +2.000 (+1.541%) Short selling $3.57B; Ratio 21.402% was the most active stock with highest net inflow of HKD796.9 million, while 3SBIO (01530.HK) +5.500 (+18.236%) Short selling $134.23M; Ratio 3.587% was the most active stock with highest net outflow of HKD449 million.

For Southbound Trading of Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect, MEITUAN-W (03690.HK) +1.600 (+1.578%) Short selling $894.75M; Ratio 8.517% was the most active stock with highest net inflow of HKD1.9 billion, while KUAISHOU-W (01024.HK) +3.050 (+4.363%) Short selling $1.12B; Ratio 23.311% was the most active stock with highest net outflow of HKD575.7 million.

At close, Southbound Trading net outflow totaled HKD0 , representing 50.42% of the total transaction amount of HKD151.24 billion.
(HK stocks quote is delayed for at least 15 mins.Short Selling Data as at 2025-09-05 16:25.)

Related NewsG Sachs' Buy List for H-shrs/ CN Concept Stocks Based on ERLI (Table)

Trump's tariffs are pushing food and drink exporters closer to ChinaUS President Donald Trump says his sweeping tariffs ...
06/09/2025

Trump's tariffs are pushing food and drink exporters closer to China

US President Donald Trump says his sweeping tariffs on most of the world will create jobs in the US, boost the American economy and bolster Washington's tax revenues.

But some experts have warned that they could also push exporters towards other countries like China and risk raising prices for American shoppers.

Agricultural brokers have told the BBC that they have seen a surge in interest in trade with China from exporters around the world.

Brazil, which is the world's biggest producer of coffee, has been slapped with a 50% US import tax.

It is one of the highest tariffs imposed by Washington and risks making the world's biggest economy less attractive for Brazilian exporters.

It means that China has now become "a shining light" for Brazil's coffee exporters, thanks to its growing cafe culture and enormous market, supply chain specialist Hugo Portes told the BBC.

"If the tariffs are meant to weaken Brazil, in reality, it is pushing sellers closer to China," said Mr Portes, who trades raw coffee beans around the world.

Brazilian exporters are in search of buyers for about eight million bags of beans sold to US roasters each year as importers begin to feel the impact of tariffs. The South American country supplies about a third of America's coffee.

In July, as exporters braced themselves for the tariffs to come into effect, more than 180 Brazilian coffee firms registered to export to China.

The move was "unprecedented" and could pave the way for more businesses to enter the Asian market, said Mr Portes.

Last year, Brazil's coffee producers also signed a billion-dollar deal with Luckin Coffee - China's answer to Starbucks.

Brazilian coffee bean exporter Fernanda Pizol says her farm, Daterra Coffee, will sell more coffee to China and other markets if demand in the US falters.

Many American buyers have asked to pause orders to assess the impact of tariffs on Brazilian goods, said Ms Pizol, who oversees sales at the company.

Business with Chinese buyers has soared over the past few years, said Ms Pizol, who added that sales in Japan and Europe are also thriving.

"We'll need to diversify... We already have a waiting list of buyers."

But for US coffee roasters, a five-pound (2.268kg) bag of Brazilian beans could rise by about 25% in the coming months, according to coffee consultant Luke Waite.

The jump means coffee drinkers might end up paying up to 7% more per cup, assuming cafes absorb some of the extra cost, he estimated.

"It seems small, but these costs add up day-to-day."

'A shining light'
In India, where a 50% US tariff took effect in August, exporters of goods like tea and seafood are also looking to China.

The South Asian nation has been caught up in Washington's push to pressure Russia over the Ukraine War. The White House imposed a 25% levy as a penalty for buying Moscow's oil, on top of a 25% tariff on Indian goods - a move Delhi called "unreasonable".

Many US buyers have paused new orders for prawns as trade talks with Washington continue, Seafood Exporters Association of India secretary-general K N Raghavan told the BBC.

He is particularly concerned that smaller US businesses will turn away from seafood.

"It will be a difficult time", he said, but added that he is optimistic that India's negotiations will pay off in the coming weeks.

Producers from his country are likely to sell more to China, India's next-biggest seafood export market, he added.

Europe, where a free trade agreement with India is in the works, also has potential for exporters, Mr Raghavan said.

China tops the list of alternative markets for his firm, said Mohit Agarwal from Asian Tea and Exports.

But he is worried that Indian exporters may lose ground to African competitors who offer similar quality products at lower prices.

US to bear the cost?
Some American businesses have said they are struggling to adapt to Trump's trade policies, arguing it is not practical to produce goods such as coffee and prawns domestically.

For instance, one major US seafood trade association has called for a tariff exemption, highlighting that the US seafood market is dominated by imports and American waters are already overfished.

Grocery retail giant Walmart has warned that tariffs mean it is likely to raise some of its prices soon. The company said it has been able to absorb the higher costs so far, but expects them to keep rising.

Many analysts and industry players have said that at least part of Trump's tariffs will be passed on to American consumers by US companies.

Indian seafood exporter Abuthahir Aboobakar pointed to the fact that many of his US customers have placed orders for the coming months despite the tariffs, giving him confidence that his firm can weather the change.

American consumers seem likely to bear the costs as US importers have so far been unable to find alternative suppliers and cannot afford to have empty shelves, said Mr Abuthahir, sales director of Jeelani Marine Products.

"US buyers have already put their money down, even with the 50% tariff in mind."

With customers in 60 other countries around the world, he said his firm has export options away from the US.

"We have already diversified," he said. "Countries like China and Europe will have a greater share in our exports going forward. So that will be the strategy."

Envoy commends Fiji-Malaysia trade relationsStaff and guests at the 68th National Day and 62nd Malaysia Day celebrations...
05/09/2025

Envoy commends Fiji-Malaysia trade relations

Staff and guests at the 68th National Day and 62nd Malaysia Day celebrations at Novotel in Lami, on Wed 03 Sept 2025. Picture: ELIKI NUKUTABU

TRADE transactions between Fiji and Malaysia increased from $98.96million to $171.5m in the first quarter of this year.

Describing trade relations between the two countries, Malaysian Ambassador to Fiji Nor’Azam Mohd Idrus said this was an increase by 58.59 per cent from last year.

Speaking at the 68th National Day and 62nd Malaysia Day celebrations held at the Novotel Hotel in Suva on Wednesday evening, Mr Nor’Azam said Malaysia recognised the importance of sovereign interdependence.

This, he said, underscored a commitment to dignity, stability, and shared prosperity.

“It highlights that nations can stand tall, even as they stand together. This is the very spirit of our friendship with Fiji, and with all partners represented here today,” he said.

He also spoke on the role of technology in shaping the future of global partnerships.

“While trade and investment are important, the biggest test of sovereign interdependence will come from technology.”

Artificial intelligence, automation and digitalisation, Mr Nor’Azam said, were transforming the world at a startling pace.

“In Malaysia’s view, AI must be embraced but always guided by values, fairness and human dignity,” he said.

“After all, we want technology to serve people, not to replace the high commissioner with a robot giving this speech.

“Year after year, Malaysia has remained among Fiji’s top 10 trading partners. This is a testament to the strength and stability of our economic relationship. We are pleased that petroleum oils, vegetable oils, hygiene products, margarine, flour, copper, and motorcars from Malaysia continue to be widely appreciated in Fiji.”

Ministry of Foreign Affairs chief of protocol Kiti Temo commended the strong bilateral relations between Malaysia and Fiji.

She reiterated the mutual benefits of continued collaboration in areas such as trade, education, culture, and technology.

Malaysia Holds Rates Steady as ExpectedThe Central Bank of Malaysia kept its key interest rate unchanged at 2.75% during...
04/09/2025

Malaysia Holds Rates Steady as Expected

The Central Bank of Malaysia kept its key interest rate unchanged at 2.75% during its August 2025 policy meeting, aligning with market expectations.

Headline inflation averaged 1.4% over the first seven months of the year and is projected to remain moderate through 2025 and 2026, supported by subdued global cost pressures.

Core inflation, which averaged 1.9% during the same period, is expected to stay stable and near its historical average.

This suggests a steady pace of economic activity without signs of significant demand-driven price pressures.

Meanwhile, Malaysia’s economy expanded by 4.4% in the first half of 2025, with full-year growth projected to grow within the 4.0% to 4.8% range.

The outlook is underpinned by resilient consumer spending and strong investment momentum.

Looking ahead to 2026, domestic demand is anticipated to remain robust and continue serving as the key driver of economic growth.

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