Foreign Exchange Market Has Lost Confidence In The Malaysian Government
#1

Ringgit Is The Worst Currency In The Southeast Asia – Foreign Exchange Market Has Lost Confidence In The Malaysian Government
22 February, 2024

Meaning the Malaysian Ringgit is hitting its 26-year low today largely because the US$7.5 trillion daily-foreign-exchange-market has increasingly lost confidence in the Malaysian government. Make no mistake – the FOREX doesn’t care about anything except the country’s policies.

If it was entirely external factor’s fault that the Ringgit is being dumped, how do you explain that neighbouring Singapore dollar has appreciated against the greenback? The Malaysian currency has slid by over 4% so far in 2024, and in the last 12 months, it is the worst currency in the Southeast Asia – losing 6.57%, almost double the second worst currency Thai Baht.

Making money in the forex (foreign exchange) is quite easy – just listen to research firms such as MIDF or Malaysian Industrial Development Finance, and bet the opposite. Led by a bunch of clueless management and researchers, the firm that specializes in development finance, investment banking, and asset management provides the best advice for investors to make truckloads of money.

For example, about two weeks ago, MIDF Research confidently said the local currency is expected to strengthen towards 4.20 against the U.S. dollar by year-end. It argued that the appreciation of the Ringgit will be supported by a decrease in interest rate differentials between both currencies, betting that the U.S. Federal Reserve would cut its interest rate. It also bet China’s economy is expected to recover.

While it’s only February, you don’t need to be a currency scientist to see how pathetic and ridiculous the research house’s projection is. Yesterday, the Ringgit briefly breached 4.80 against the dollar – its weakest level since reaching an all-time low of 4.8850 in 1998. Worse, China’s consumer prices fell at their fastest pace in 15 years in January 2024, forcing it to cut 5-year loan rate to 3.95% – the largest one-time cut.

It seems the Ringgit is screwed – regardless whether the U.S. raises its interest rate or China cuts its interest rate. While the U.S. and other Western economies struggle to bring down high inflation, China is facing the opposite problem – deflation. In the U.S., people continue to spend despite prices hitting the roof. In China, people refuse to spend despite falling prices.

Last month, the Fed decided to hold its benchmark borrowing rate in a range between 5.25% and 5.5%. The consumer price index in January 2024 was 3.1%, down from 3.4% in December 2023. However, the inflation rate was higher relative to a year earlier (January 2023). Meaning the inflation was hotter than expected and many Americans are still feeling the pinch.

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed that the index was driven higher in January by the rising cost of shelter, motor vehicle insurance, and medical care. Although the inflation rate has dropped from its 22-year high, the Federal Reserve has made it very clear that they won’t cut the interest rate until it is “more confident” that inflation is moving “sustainably” to their target 2%.

In fact, the Fed had dropped many hints since last year that they actually had no idea whether it should cut the interest rate or not. They fear that if they cut rates now and inflation re-accelerates, then the Fed could be forced to raise rates again, making them very foolish. The problem is the economy and the job market appeared to be booming despite the current high interest rate.

So, what if the U.S. economy continues to grow and thrive even without any rate cuts? Some officials argued that since everything looks good now (low unemployment, booming economy, lower inflation), the Fed should leave the current high interest rate as it is without any urgency to aggressively cut it. This could be the magical “soft landing” the Fed was looking at.

However, other officials argued that the longer the borrowing rates stay at the current high level, the higher the risk that many companies and consumers would stop borrowing and spending. This could weaken the economy and potentially sending it into a recession. In its balancing act, the Fed most likely will delay the rate cuts as it has no need to rush to reduce borrowing costs.

This is not the first time MIDF got its projection upside-down. The research house said last March the Ringgit will reach RM4.00 against the U.S. dollar by end 2023. When that did not happen, the clueless analysts said in Oct 2023 that they were still confident that the currency will end the year at least at RM4.30. Of course, it got it all wrong as Ringgit was the worst currency in Asia after the Japanese Yen.

Joining the bandwagon of ignorance, the central bank – Bank Negara Malaysia – said the Ringgit’s performance does not reflect the country’s economic strength. The clueless Central Bank Governor Abdul Rasheed Ghaffour, like a broken record, has blamed external factors such as the U.S. interest rate, geopolitical concerns and uncertainty surrounding China’s economic prospects.

Like MIDF, the central bank insists that it expects the local currency to appreciate this year based on the assumption of an improving global economy, the government’s commitment to implement structural reforms, and the expected lowering of interest rates in advanced economies. If this is the best Bank Negara can do, perhaps PM Anwar should hire a primary school student as its governor.

Here’s a question for the central bank. Why did the currency surged by 1.8% right after Anwar Ibrahim’s appointment on Nov 24, 2022 as the 10th Prime Minister – the largest single-day gain since March 2016? It appreciated from RM4.74 to RM4.24 (30 Jan, 2023). For two months, the Ringgit strengthened tremendously due to foreign investors’ confidence in the new leadership.

The same external factor – investors’ confidence – then drove the currency from RM4.24 to the current RM4.80. Meaning the Malaysian Ringgit is hitting its 26-year low today largely because the US$7.5 trillion daily-foreign-exchange-market has increasingly lost confidence in the Malaysian government. Make no mistake – the FOREX doesn’t care about anything except the country’s policies.

If it was entirely external factor’s fault that the Ringgit is being dumped, how do you explain that neighbouring Singapore dollar has appreciated against the greenback? The Malaysian currency has slid by over 4% so far in 2024, and in the last 12 months, it is the worst currency in the Southeast Asia – losing 6.57%, almost double the second worst currency Thai Baht.

All the countries in the region – Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippines – faced the same external factors blamed by Malaysia. Yet, their currencies did not drop like the Ringgit. It was so bad that three out of four (75%) Malaysians working and living in Singapore are skilled or semi-skilled workers, thanks to brain drain as a result of racism and discrimination policies.

Yes, unlike Singapore’s good governance and strong monetary policies, which allowed the country to follow suit when the U.S. started raising interest rate, Malaysia had to halt its interest-rate hikes at 3% compared to U.S.’ 5.5%. It makes Singapore a more attractive destination for capital compared with Malaysia to investors interested in parking their money.

The fact that the Ringgit hit a record low against Singapore dollar proves that the weakness of local currency cannot be blamed on high interest rate in the U.S. or on the low borrowing rate in China. It’s due to the low demand for the currency in the international market. In 2023, Mainland China, the United States and Malaysia were Singapore’s top trading partners.

Therefore, the Chinese economy will affect Singapore the same way it impacts Malaysia. While China, Malaysia’s largest trading partner, contributed 17.1% to the country’s total trade in 2023, the world’s second largest economy accounted for 10.1% of Singapore’s total trade in the same year. The best part is Singapore’s economy only grew 1.1% in 2023, but Malaysia’s growth was 3.7%.

In 2024, Malaysia believes its economy would grow stronger at 4%-5%, whilst Singapore growth forecast is merely 1%-3%. Yet, the Ringgit becomes increasingly worthless while the Singapore dollar becomes the gold standard in the region. The fact that the Bank Negara Malaysia Governor could only offer childish excuses speaks volumes about the country’s incompetence.

Sure, blaming the Chinese sagging economy is the easiest way out. However, that won’t stop foreign investors from avoiding the country like a plague. Why should foreign investors believe in the Ringgit when even local exporters have very little faith in the local currency, refusing to convert the revenue generated from exports into Ringgit because they believe it is doomed?

In truth, the investors do not like Anwar government’s excessive religious politics as it shows the unity government was fragile. They don’t like the emergence of radical Islamic politics, which is growing stronger with each passing day because the government was too afraid to take the necessary actions to nip it in the bud. And they certainly don’t like Anwar’s anti-corruption empty rhetoric.

In truth, the investors do not believe the Anwar Administration is capable of fixing the balance deficit, which is growing faster than a speeding bullet, let alone reducing the RM1.5 trillion national debt inherited from previous corrupt administrations. To pay the salaries of the 1.71-million bloated civil servants alone, RM95.6 billion (24.3% of Budget 2024) was needed.

Retirement for government pensioners would burn another RM32.4 billion (8.2% of Budget 2024). Worse, in order to appease the government staffs, 90% of whom are Malay voters, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has agreed to increase their salary. Without political will to downsize the world’s most bloated civil service or to scrap the pension scheme, it would only drain the national coffers.

The pause on the overnight policy rate (OPR) hikes was a mistake as it intensifies capital outflow to take advantage of higher returns in the United States. But the policymakers have no choice because to raise interest rates further could kill local businesses. However, the damage could be worse as the worthless Ringgit will make imports so expensive that it could also kill consumption and local businesses.

Prime Minister Anwar can scream till blue in the face about de-dollarization, Palestinian solidarity program, Bumiputera Economic Congress, dubious reforms, RM347 billion in FDI (foreign direct investment), Madani Economy and whatnot. But the investors are not stupid. They could judge after a year whether he is a reformist or just a chameleon who tries to please everyone without achieving anything.

In reality, his government’s approval ratings have plunged to 41% in 2023 from 61% in 2022. The trumpeted RM347 billion FDI and de-dollarization are distant water that can’t quench a fire nearby. In reality, investors could see how the Palestinian solidarity program in schools exposed schools exposed the existence of radicals and extremists in the education system.

In reality, investors do not believe in Anwar’s reforms after Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid’s 47 money laundering and corruption charges were thrown out, followed by 50% discount “royal pardon” for former Prime Minister Najib Razak’s 12-year jail sentence. More importantly, investors have no confidence that Malaysia will not turn into a Taliban state after the next 16th General Election.
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#2

(26-02-2024, 12:16 PM)CHAOS Wrote:  Ringgit Is The Worst Currency In The Southeast Asia – Foreign Exchange Market Has Lost Confidence In The Malaysian Government
22 February, 2024

Meaning the Malaysian Ringgit is hitting its 26-year low today largely because the US$7.5 trillion daily-foreign-exchange-market has increasingly lost confidence in the Malaysian government. Make no mistake – the FOREX doesn’t care about anything except the country’s policies.

If it was entirely external factor’s fault that the Ringgit is being dumped, how do you explain that neighbouring Singapore dollar has appreciated against the greenback? The Malaysian currency has slid by over 4% so far in 2024, and in the last 12 months, it is the worst currency in the Southeast Asia – losing 6.57%, almost double the second worst currency Thai Baht.

Making money in the forex (foreign exchange) is quite easy – just listen to research firms such as MIDF or Malaysian Industrial Development Finance, and bet the opposite. Led by a bunch of clueless management and researchers, the firm that specializes in development finance, investment banking, and asset management provides the best advice for investors to make truckloads of money.

For example, about two weeks ago, MIDF Research confidently said the local currency is expected to strengthen towards 4.20 against the U.S. dollar by year-end. It argued that the appreciation of the Ringgit will be supported by a decrease in interest rate differentials between both currencies, betting that the U.S. Federal Reserve would cut its interest rate. It also bet China’s economy is expected to recover.

While it’s only February, you don’t need to be a currency scientist to see how pathetic and ridiculous the research house’s projection is. Yesterday, the Ringgit briefly breached  4.80 against the dollar – its weakest level since reaching an all-time low of 4.8850 in 1998. Worse, China’s consumer prices fell at their fastest pace in 15 years in January 2024, forcing it to cut 5-year loan rate to 3.95% – the largest one-time cut.

It seems the Ringgit is screwed – regardless whether the U.S. raises its interest rate or China cuts its interest rate. While the U.S. and other Western economies struggle to bring down high inflation, China is facing the opposite problem – deflation. In the U.S., people continue to spend despite prices hitting the roof. In China, people refuse to spend despite falling prices.

Last month, the Fed decided to hold its benchmark borrowing rate in a range between 5.25% and 5.5%. The consumer price index in January 2024 was 3.1%, down from 3.4% in December 2023. However, the inflation rate was higher relative to a year earlier (January 2023). Meaning the inflation was hotter than expected and many Americans are still feeling the pinch.

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed that the index was driven higher in January by the rising cost of shelter, motor vehicle insurance, and medical care. Although the inflation rate has dropped from its 22-year high, the Federal Reserve has made it very clear that they won’t cut the interest rate until it is “more confident” that inflation is moving “sustainably” to their target 2%.

In fact, the Fed had dropped many hints since last year that they actually had no idea whether it should cut the interest rate or not. They fear that if they cut rates now and inflation re-accelerates, then the Fed could be forced to raise rates again, making them very foolish. The problem is the economy and the job market appeared to be booming despite the current high interest rate.

So, what if the U.S. economy continues to grow and thrive even without any rate cuts? Some officials argued that since everything looks good now (low unemployment, booming economy, lower inflation), the Fed should leave the current high interest rate as it is without any urgency to aggressively cut it. This could be the magical “soft landing” the Fed was looking at.

However, other officials argued that the longer the borrowing rates stay at the current high level, the higher the risk that many companies and consumers would stop borrowing and spending. This could weaken the economy and potentially sending it into a recession. In its balancing act, the Fed most likely will delay the rate cuts as it has no need to rush to reduce borrowing costs.

This is not the first time MIDF got its projection upside-down. The research house said last March the Ringgit will reach RM4.00 against the U.S. dollar by end 2023. When that did not happen, the clueless analysts said in Oct 2023 that they were still confident that the currency will end the year at least at RM4.30. Of course, it got it all wrong as Ringgit was the worst currency in Asia after the Japanese Yen.

Joining the bandwagon of ignorance, the central bank – Bank Negara Malaysia – said the Ringgit’s performance does not reflect the country’s economic strength. The clueless Central Bank Governor Abdul Rasheed Ghaffour, like a broken record, has blamed external factors such as the U.S. interest rate, geopolitical concerns and uncertainty surrounding China’s economic prospects.

Like MIDF, the central bank insists that it expects the local currency to appreciate this year based on the assumption of an improving global economy, the government’s commitment to implement structural reforms, and the expected lowering of interest rates in advanced economies. If this is the best Bank Negara can do, perhaps PM Anwar should hire a primary school student as its governor.

Here’s a question for the central bank. Why did the currency surged by 1.8% right after Anwar Ibrahim’s appointment on Nov 24, 2022 as the 10th Prime Minister – the largest single-day gain since March 2016? It appreciated from RM4.74 to RM4.24 (30 Jan, 2023). For two months, the Ringgit strengthened tremendously due to foreign investors’ confidence in the new leadership.

The same external factor – investors’ confidence – then drove the currency from RM4.24 to the current RM4.80. Meaning the Malaysian Ringgit is hitting its 26-year low today largely because the US$7.5 trillion daily-foreign-exchange-market has increasingly lost confidence in the Malaysian government. Make no mistake – the FOREX doesn’t care about anything except the country’s policies.

If it was entirely external factor’s fault that the Ringgit is being dumped, how do you explain that neighbouring Singapore dollar has appreciated against the greenback? The Malaysian currency has slid by over 4% so far in 2024, and in the last 12 months, it is the worst currency in the Southeast Asia – losing 6.57%, almost double the second worst currency Thai Baht.

All the countries in the region – Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippines – faced the same external factors blamed by Malaysia. Yet, their currencies did not drop like the Ringgit. It was so bad that three out of four (75%) Malaysians working and living in Singapore are skilled or semi-skilled workers, thanks to brain drain as a result of racism and discrimination policies.

Yes, unlike Singapore’s good governance and strong monetary policies, which allowed the country to follow suit when the U.S. started raising interest rate, Malaysia had to halt its interest-rate hikes at 3% compared to U.S.’ 5.5%. It makes Singapore a more attractive destination for capital compared with Malaysia to investors interested in parking their money.

The fact that the Ringgit hit a record low against Singapore dollar proves that the weakness of local currency cannot be blamed on high interest rate in the U.S. or on the low borrowing rate in China. It’s due to the low demand for the currency in the international market. In 2023, Mainland China, the United States and Malaysia were Singapore’s top trading partners.

Therefore, the Chinese economy will affect Singapore the same way it impacts Malaysia. While China, Malaysia’s largest trading partner, contributed 17.1% to the country’s total trade in 2023, the world’s second largest economy accounted for 10.1% of Singapore’s total trade in the same year. The best part is Singapore’s economy only grew 1.1% in 2023, but Malaysia’s growth was 3.7%.

In 2024, Malaysia believes its economy would grow stronger at 4%-5%, whilst Singapore growth forecast is merely 1%-3%. Yet, the Ringgit becomes increasingly worthless while the Singapore dollar becomes the gold standard in the region. The fact that the Bank Negara Malaysia Governor could only offer childish excuses speaks volumes about the country’s incompetence.

Sure, blaming the Chinese sagging economy is the easiest way out. However, that won’t stop foreign investors from avoiding the country like a plague. Why should foreign investors believe in the Ringgit when even local exporters have very little faith in the local currency, refusing to convert the revenue generated from exports into Ringgit because they believe it is doomed?

In truth, the investors do not like Anwar government’s excessive religious politics as it shows the unity government was fragile. They don’t like the emergence of radical Islamic politics, which is growing stronger with each passing day because the government was too afraid to take the necessary actions to nip it in the bud. And they certainly don’t like Anwar’s anti-corruption empty rhetoric.

In truth, the investors do not believe the Anwar Administration is capable of fixing the balance deficit, which is growing faster than a speeding bullet, let alone reducing the RM1.5 trillion national debt inherited from previous corrupt administrations. To pay the salaries of the 1.71-million bloated civil servants alone, RM95.6 billion (24.3% of Budget 2024) was needed.

Retirement for government pensioners would burn another RM32.4 billion (8.2% of Budget 2024). Worse, in order to appease the government staffs, 90% of whom are Malay voters, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has agreed to increase their salary. Without political will to downsize the world’s most bloated civil service or to scrap the pension scheme, it would only drain the national coffers.

The pause on the overnight policy rate (OPR) hikes was a mistake as it intensifies capital outflow to take advantage of higher returns in the United States. But the policymakers have no choice because to raise interest rates further could kill local businesses. However, the damage could be worse as the worthless Ringgit will make imports so expensive that it could also kill consumption and local businesses.

Prime Minister Anwar can scream till blue in the face about de-dollarization, Palestinian solidarity program, Bumiputera Economic Congress, dubious reforms, RM347 billion in FDI (foreign direct investment), Madani Economy and whatnot. But the investors are not stupid. They could judge after a year whether he is a reformist or just a chameleon who tries to please everyone without achieving anything.

In reality, his government’s approval ratings have plunged to 41% in 2023 from 61% in 2022. The trumpeted RM347 billion FDI and de-dollarization are distant water that can’t quench a fire nearby. In reality, investors could see how the Palestinian solidarity program in schools exposed schools exposed the existence of radicals and extremists in the education system.

In reality, investors do not believe in Anwar’s reforms after Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid’s 47 money laundering and corruption charges were thrown out, followed by 50% discount “royal pardon” for former Prime Minister Najib Razak’s 12-year jail sentence. More importantly, investors have no confidence that Malaysia will not turn into a Taliban state after the next 16th General Election.
big mistakes to throw out the dpm corruption charges
equally silly to pardon najib
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#3

(26-02-2024, 01:04 PM)talky Wrote:  big mistakes to throw out the dpm corruption charges
equally silly to pardon najib

[Image: image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.theedgema...=1920&q=75]
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#4

*From Mariam Mokhtar :-*👍👌

*Seven Questions Malays Should Ask Their Leaders.*

*1. HOW COME AFTER 60 YEARS WE ARE STILL BEHIND THE OTHER MALAYSIANS?*

Are We Stupid Or Are You – Our Leaders – That after over half a century you have still not got it right?

The Malays In Singapore Are By And Large Better Off Than Us yet they do not have Bumiputraism.
Why not learn from them?

The wealth gap intra the Malay Community is much wider than that of the other communities. We have Super Rich Malays while most of us struggle to make ends meet.

*Are these rich Malays so much cleverer or more hard working than the rest of us?*

Or is it because *they have used their positions and connections to enrich themselves at our expense?*

*2. WOULD IT BE TRUE THAT IF “AFFIRMATIVE ACTION” IS BASED ON NEEDS AND NOT ON RACE THERE WILL BE MORE FOR US POOR MALAYS?*

After all since the Rich Malays can afford to support their children’s education why are they taking scholarships?

Every place they take means one less place for a poor student.

And how does giving us discount on buying shares help us. Most of us cannot understand the stock market and even if we did, we have no spare money to play the share market. This benefits the rich Malays only but not us.

Same for housing we can only afford one house if at all, while the rich can buy many.

Now If House Purchase Discounts were given strictly on the basis of needs and not race, then perhaps House Prices Can Come Down because of the lower holding cost for developers. This will benefit us.

*3. YOU KEEP TELLING US THE CHINESE ARE OUR ENEMIES; THAT THEY STEAL FROM US AND THAT IF NOT FOR YOU WE WOULD BECOME EXTINCT.*

How did the Chinese steal from us and how are they going to make us extinct? *Explain . . .!?!*

Are you not using them to scare us so that we run to you?

*4. ON EDUCATION: WHY ARE EVEN OUR FELLOW MALAYS LEAVING THE NATIONAL SCHOOLS AND GOING TO CHINESE SCHOOLS???*

*ARE THEY TELLING YOU SOMETHING?*

Why is Religion so much an element in our schools. Should we not have more time on subjects that prepare our children for the workplace – to cari makan?

And if as you keep telling us that we have the Best Education why are you sending your children to private schools and overseas universities?
Why are our universities ranked so low?

We want good public universities led by good vice chancellors; we don’t care about his race. Yet you play politics with our children’s future by not appointing the best, but using race as a criteria.

*5. TO OUR RELIGIOUS LEADERS:*

*WHY IS THE ISLAM PRACTISED IN MANY ISLAMIC COUNTRIES MORE LIBERAL AND OPEN THAN OURS .. ?!?*

*WORDS YOU FORBID THE INFIDELS TO USE ARE USED OPENLY BY NON-MUSLIMS EVEN IN ARABIC COUNTRIES.*

I Hear That In Indonesia There Are Siblings Of Different Faiths In The Same Family.
That *A Muslim Can Marry A Christian Without Either Converting From Their Religion*

*Explain Al Baqara 256: There is no compulsion in religion?*

And why do you think we are we so Weak In Our Faith that we can be so easily confused, or influenced by the sign of the cross, or Christians celebrating their festivals that you forbid us to even convey our festive greetings to them? Or not allow them to enjoy their Oktober Fest as we consider it haram.

*Who Are You/We To Impose Our Beliefs On Others.* How did we become so intolerant?

*Why is it that you make a fuss of how our women (or other women) dress and trivial matters like that?*

*Yet you close your eyes to the corruption that goes on?*

*You say nothing about how our leaders have cheated us*

*Has your silence been bought by the fat pay you get????*

*6. YOU SCOLD US FOR BEING LAZY AND CALL US USELESS – THAT WE CANNOT WALK WITHOUT A TONGKAT.*

*YET YOU KEEP PUSHING THE TONGKAT ON US. WHY?*

Is it to keep us Dependent on you? Are you afraid that if we can think for ourselves and stand on our own feet without you we can make up our minds what is good or bad?

*7. WHY DO THE OLDER GENERATION MALAYSIANS GET ON SO MUCH BETTER WITH EACH OTHER AND WE DO NOT? IS IT THE SCHOOL SYSTEM?*

Or Is it the less extreme and more tolerant Islam in their day?

My Grandmother did not wear a Tudung yet she is a Good Muslim. My Grandfather sat in the coffeeshops with his Chinese and Indian Kakis and no one made a fuss.

*Have You Brainwashed Us To Hate The Non-Malays?*

I do not care about race; and religion is a personal matter – Between Me And Allah. I do not want to be used as a Pawn to *Further Your Own Selfish Agenda.*

All I want is a good job and peace and harmony. I want a good education for my children so that they too can have a bright future.

I look at our Malay Brothers in Sarawak and Sabah and envy them for their racial harmony and how they enjoy each other.

My Grandfather tells me that we were like that once. I want to be like that again.

It is not the Non-Malays who do not want to mix with us. *It’s us who want to be exclusive and that works to our detriment.*

Don’t Play Racial Politics with our lives so you can Divide and Rule, and enrich yourself at our expense.

You can fool some of us all the time and all us some of the time, but you cannot fool all of us all the time.

*Explain Why You Have Failed After 60 Years Of Trying.* 🙄🙄🤔
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#5

Recession will come 2nd Q. AMERICA savings will be depleted with No further Fed printing.


Smile
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#6

Aiyo ... The bank negara governor is dun play play one ...
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