Bangkok Post

Malaysian producers still cautious

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s key electronic­s sector has been winning more overseas orders, but there’s no sign of a sustained surge that would lift an economy growing at its slowest pace in more than two years.

Like other commodity producers, Malaysia is suffering from sliding oil and gas prices, and its best hope for recovery may rest with its manufactur­ing sector, especially electronic­s firms clustered on the tech island of Penang.

Shipments of electrical and electronic goods in October jumped 22.7% from a year earlier, lifting export growth to 16.7% in ringgit terms.

Factories that make these goods are doing better than the rest, with production in October up 13.9% from a year earlier, more than triple the increase of overall industrial output.

Still, manufactur­ers are not convinced the momentum can be maintained.

“Overall companies are still cautious,” said Wong Siew Hai, chairman of the Malaysian American Electronic­s Industry, which counts Intel, Dell and Motorola among its members.

The increase in electronic­s exports, which account for about one third of the total, partly reflects the ringgit’s nearly 18% tumble against the dollar this year. When presented in dollars, shipments seem weaker.

“We need more evidence to show there’s a positive outlook for 2016,” Mr Wong added.

Until recently, Malaysia was one of Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing economies, but its annual growth rate dropped from 6.5% in 2014’s fourth quarter to 4.7% in the July-September period.

Tumbles in the prices of commoditie­s and the demand for them, plus weak domestic demand, cloud the country’s growth outlook.

“Malaysia definitely needs all the help it can get from the electronic­s products side,” said Wellian Wiranto, an economist at OCBC in Singapore.

A recent survey showed consumer confidence to be the worst on record, with nearly half of respondent­s reporting lower incomes. Many were squeezed after a consumptio­n tax was imposed in April.

Conditions are somewhat better for electronic­s firms plugged into global supply chains, said Mr Wong.

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