


Fitch estimates the slippage is unlikely to increase
Malaysia’s debt ratio, which will remain around 52% of GDP until 2017.
- In Friday’s budget, Najib unveiled plans to raise taxes for high-income earners and accelerate infrastructure development while lowering the deficit from 3.2% in 2015.
- “Fitch didn’t help,” said Vishnu Varathan, a Singapore-based economist at Mizuho Bank Ltd.
- “The worry is that with oil prices looking as soggy as they are and economic headwinds persisting, hopes for uninterrupted fiscal consolidation may be a little overdone.”
- The currency depreciated 0.9%, the most since October 20, to 4.2670 a dollar in Kuala Lumpur, according to prices from local banks compiled by Bloomberg.
- While the ringgit has gained 3.2% this month on fading bets for a US interest-rate increase in 2015, it is still the worst performer in Asia this year as a slump in Brent crude cuts the oil exporting nation’s revenue.
- The Bloomberg Commodity Index of 22 raw materials from oil to metals fell for a fifth day, headed for the longest stretch of declines in two months.

Sovereign bonds rose, with the 10-year yield falling two
basis points to 4.1%, the lowest since August 5, according to prices from Bursa
Malaysia.
Source: – Bloomberg
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