No reserve release addresses the LNG gap. For gas-dependent grids in Singapore, Thailand, and the Philippines, the shortage is structural until Hormuz reopens.
Cape EMS Berhad's transformation story is one of the more closely watched on Bursa Malaysia's Main Market—a company that recorded its first annual loss in FY2024, returned to profit over the following two quarters, and is now announcing a structural pivot into renewable energy infrastructure. Execution against the CEB 2.0 roadmap and revenue contribution from Cape Renewables will be the key metrics for investors to track through 2026.
Bank Indonesia's foreign exchange reserves stood at USD 151.9 billion heading into the March decision—above the international adequacy standard but declining. The reserve trajectory is now a metric worth watching alongside the rate.
The Kredivo-Timo deal sends a clear message: in Southeast Asia's next fintech chapter, regional players are acquiring licenses, not building around them.
The PHP 400 million injection into Salmon Bank is not just a capital event. It is the opening move in a broader licensing and product expansion strategy for 2026.
For payments platforms targeting emerging markets, Singapore remains the region's preferred regulatory anchor. EBANX's new HQ is the latest confirmation of that trend.
The Energy of Change Summit on March 10 covered generation equipment, grid infrastructure, and technology cooperation across three distinct layers of Vietnam's power transition, all in a single announcement.
The Philippines generates 62% of its electricity from coal, with over 80% of that coal imported, meaning grid price exposure to global commodity markets extends well beyond the current LNG crisis.