Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Interest rates will be higher again??

Received email regarding interest will be higher again.
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Published: 2010/03/16
Bank Negara Malaysia said it may increase interest rates further to avert asset bubbles and discourage risky investments by people seeking better returns, even as inflation will likely remain "modest" this year.

"We will review the conditions at our next monetary policy meeting and work toward further normalising if necessary," governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz said in a March 12 Bloomberg Television interview in Kuala Lumpur. "Inflation will continue to be modest and therefore it would not prompt us towards tightening, but that does not preclude that we will continue to normalise interest rates."

Malaysia raised its benchmark interest rate from a record low to 2.25 per cent this month, becoming the second Asian country to boost borrowing costs as the region leads a recovery from the global slump. The ringgit faces "upward pressure" as regional trade rebounds and Bank Negara increases rates before the US, Europe and Japan, according to Franklin Templeton Investments.

The ringgit is Asia's best performer this year, gaining 3 per cent against the US dollar. The central bank wants to prevent "financial imbalances" that could undermine the economy's recovery from last year's recession, Zeti said.

"There is no compelling evidence of asset bubbles in Malaysia based on current indicators," Suhaimi Ilias, chief economist at Maybank Investment Bank Bhd in Kuala Lumpur, said before the interview. Still "the risk is there if the interest rate is kept very low for an extended period as money searches for returns to beat inflation that is creeping up."

China has started draining excess cash from the economy to prevent asset bubbles. Australia and Vietnam have raised borrowing costs as inflation accelerates, and the Philippine central bank last week pared back a lending programme for banks.

Keeping interest rates too low for too long may lead to the "mispricing of risks" by those who anticipate borrowing costs will stay low, as well as create asset bubbles, Zeti said. While the central bank doesn't expect to see bubbles forming "on the horizon," there are signs that people are buying higher-yielding assets "that pose significant risks," she said.

Bank Negara will monitor the strength of the economic recovery in deciding whether interest rates need to rise further, the governor said.

Current borrowing costs are still "very supportive" of economic growth, Zeti said. The level at which rates are considered to be "normalised" would depend on the strength of the recovery, she said, adding that inflation won't be "a factor" in 2010 even after taking into account possible increases in fuel and power prices.

The central bank, whose policy team next meets in May, raised its overnight policy rate from 2 per cent on March 4, the first increase in almost four years, saying the economy's recovery is "firmly established."

Malaysia's gross domestic product expanded 4.5 per cent last quarter after contracting the previous nine months. Exports surged by the most in more than 11 years in January.

"We expect growth to improve from the levels we have seen in the fourth quarter," Zeti said.

"Certainly the first half of the year, all the signs are pointing to stronger growth" as domestic demand and investment recover, she said.

Inflation of about 2 per cent would be considered "modest", Zeti said. Malaysia's consumer prices rose for a second month in January, climbing 1.3 per cent from a year earlier from an average 0.6 per cent in 2009.

Should price gains accelerate further to 3 per cent, for example, "we would begin looking at what are the sources of inflation because if it was demand-induced then" the central bank would look at "tightening" monetary policy, Zeti said.

Zeti refrained from raising interest rates in 2008 when consumer prices rose as much as 8.5 per cent in July and August amid soaring oil and commodity prices, saying inflation wasn't driven by higher demand and would ease as global growth slowed.

Malaysia's policy makers aren't "inflation targeters", she said last week.

The Malaysian ringgit has climbed 2 per cent since the central bank's decision to raise rates this month, making it Asia's best-performing currency outside Japan during the period.

The currency's appreciation has reflected Malaysia's strengthening "fundamentals", Zeti said.

"We have seen this level before and we are not concerned," she said.

"We have allowed our exchange rate to be market determined and we are there to ensure orderly market conditions. Our export sector has never relied on the exchange rate to gain competitiveness."

Zeti, who said previously Malaysia will consider allowing the ringgit to be traded overseas once the country has a more developed foreign-exchange market, said in the interview the central bank has formed a task force involving the financial and banking industry to work toward developing the country's foreign-exchange market "with a view to internationalising" the ringgit.

"Once that market has become more vibrant and with the products and services being offered in terms of the forward market and so on, and in terms of hedging instruments, then we'll look at internationalising the currency," she said.

"Right now we don't have a time frame." - Bloomberg
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Sunday, March 14, 2010

Air Hitam Recreation Park Sungai Dua Butterworth





Air Hitam Dalam Educational Forest

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Location :
In the district of Seberang Perai North District, Sungai Dua, Penang.
Coordinates of the park are N05º 27.195’ E100º 27.146’

Natural Heritage Status:
Air Hitam Dalam Educational Forest or popularly known as Air Hitam Dalam Recreational Forest near Sungai Dua, Butterworth is home to some 100 species of flora and fauna. It is the only gazetted peat swamp in Penang with an area of 11 hectares. Air Hitam Dalam literally means Deep Black Water where a river in the park runs deep and black. It is now managed by the State Forestry Department.
The park is well connected with a 1,000m walkway but a newly constructed river bund has marred the landscape by dividing the park and walkway into two sections.

Gazettement :
Present status as Educational Forest managed by the State Forestry Department. The river reserve managed by Jabatan Pengairan dan Saliran Malaysia (JPS).

(text taken from http://northern.malaysianaturalheritage.com/?p=61)
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 p/s: sadly, the facilities is poor maintainance and a lot of things broken.
 

Friday, March 12, 2010

Eevrything back to normal

I have been busy for about a month, now everyhting back to normal. It is a great moment over the past month, spend time with family and my little uncle. From preparation for celebrate CNY, go to KL, Malacca, Langkawi, every moment is great. Time flies so fast.
Take care my lovely uncle. Thanks for bringing me into photography world.........i have been wonderful time with u taking all wildlife animal. Thanks for your also because of u i been go to zoo, bird park and recreation park within a month!!!!! Thanks for u because of u i dont know near my housing area got so many wildlife live within me!!!!! Certainly, i will be more natural friendly after this.









I am not sure when can met u again, 1 years, 2 years, 3 years, 4 years or 5 years time? but certaintly, we  will miss u. I have a little wish in my heart. hehe... hopefully my dream will come ture..