After Malaysia’s stormy financial fortunes in the late 1990s, the country has recovered well, and its economy is proving of valuable interest to international markets.
Asia-Pacific
China and India: the new powerhouses
March 3, 2004Mervyn Davies, group chief executive of Standard Chartered, shares his vision of Asia with The Banker.
Preparing for the competition
March 3, 2004China’s barriers to foreign banks will soon be coming down but their expertise will also be useful to local institutions, says Louise do Rosario.
Tortuous path to pensions reform
March 3, 2004Kala Rao reports on India’s timid yet nevertheless genuine attempts to overhaul its pension system – and on the global players licking their lips in anticipation.
Riding India’s growth wave
March 3, 2004Foreign investors are bullish on India’s banks and ICICI especially. By Kala Rao and Stephen Timewell in Mumbai.
Foreigners gear up for Malaysian liberalisation
March 3, 2004Foreign banks are already checking out local acquisitions in the run up to the full liberalisation of the Malaysian banking market in 2007. Bank Negara, the central bank of Malaysia, will then allow foreign banks to buy local ones, although in the next few years it will gradually allow some foreign banks to open more branches and have off-site ATMs.
Ready to face the music in Malaysia
March 3, 2004
Maybank CEO Amirsham Aziz believes Malay banks are ready to face foreign competition, he tells Karina Robinson.
A grey-haired man wearing a grey shirt and grey trousers is not a promising subject. But Amirsham Aziz, the unassuming president and CEO of Maybank, Malaysia’s banking behemoth, turns out to be a fan of the Havana-based Tropicana nightclub. He goes on about “the trees, the music, the sound, the acoustics, the colours”. (My emphasis would have been on the three dozen gorgeous mulatas (mixed race girls) who form the chorus line of probably the oldest outdoor cabaret show in the world, but perhaps only women can say these things nowadays.)
More reform is key to sustaining growth
March 3, 2004Financial sector reform must continue and deepen across Asia for prosperity to be sustainable in the region, says Tadao Chino.
Dire predictions on China are nothing more than scaremongering
February 3, 2004Projections on growth for China that envisage a doomsday scenario for the rest of the world are both overblown and flawed.