Asia-Pacific will require US$90 trillion (RM382.1 trillion) in energy investments through 2050 to power its growing economies, while achieving net zero ambitions, said Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) president and group chief executive officer. Taufik said that the region stands at a critical crossroad amid a polycrisis of escalating geopolitical tensions, volatile energy markets, and intensifying climate threats. “To address Asia’s growth ambitions, even as it aims to achieve net zero, around US$90 trillion just for this region in energy investment will be needed until 2050,” he said at the Energy Asia 2025 conference here on Monday. (source The Edge)
Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas), Malaysia’s state-owned oil-and-gas company, is looking to expand output from more affordable assets abroad, in an effort to cut production costs and rein in declining profits. Petronas, as the company is known, is seeking to produce oil at a break-even level of US$50 (RM212.37) per barrel, from US$60 to US$70 in the past five years, said Mohd Jukris Abdul Wahab, the chief executive officer of Petronas’ upstream business, which includes exploring, developing and extracting oil and gas. The firm will focus more on countries where it already has a presence, including Canada, Suriname, Brazil, Turkmenistan and several Southeast Asian nations. Still, Petronas doesn’t rule out going into a new country if it provided “headroom for us to grow,” he said. (source The Edge)
The FTSE Malay KLCI is down -0.27%
The ringgit is marginally better, up +0.06% at 4.24
Bonds saw yields drift higher with the MGS 10YR up +1.5bp at 3.55%
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Moody's has downgraded the US's long-term credit rating to Aa1 trom Aaa. The move may not have been fully expected today. But it was the last holdout among they S&P and Fitch to demote the USA from the top rating, and they placed negative outlook on the US last year (now stable). Fiscal deterioration, both past and anticipated as Congress wrangles with the Republican fiscal bill, is cited as the key factor. From the release (link):
The "extraordinary measures" available to Treasury to stave off a debt default were down to $82B as of May 14, per a Treasury Department release today.

There was mixed news on the housing and wholesale/manufacturing sales fronts this week, which on net look to slightly upwardly bias Q1 GDP estimates, pending next week's retail sales reading.
Housing starts blew through expectations at 278.6k in April (226.2k expected, 214.2k prior). This came after building permits fell a worse-than-expected 4.1% M/M in March as reported Wednesday.

On the sales front, March data was soft but positive versus expectations and could add a slight upward drift to Q1 GDP expectations.
