ASEAN+3 Corporate and MSME Debt-at-Risk in a High Interest Rate Environment: From Pandemic to Pandemonium?
Credit risks posed by ASEAN+3 non-financial corporate (NFC) sectors have risen.
Credit risks posed by ASEAN+3 non-financial corporate (NFC) sectors have risen.
Speaking to 21st Century Business Herald, AMRO Chief Economist Hoe Ee Khor discusses the region's economic trajectory this year as well as China's impact on ASEAN.
We invite submissions of papers on global financial stability issues including rise in global interest rates, debt overhang, global payment systems, and more.
Growth for ASEAN+3 was better than expected in 2023, supported by a turnaround in exports amid robust domestic demand and stabilizing economic activities in China.
Growth for ASEAN+3 was better than expected in 2023, supported by a turnaround in exports amid robust domestic demand and stabilizing economic activities in China.
This note provides an update on the significant progress made and discusses the challenges faced by the ASEAN+3 member economies, the United States, and Europe.
AMRO Chief Economist Hoe Ee Khor discusses the 2024 outlook for the ASEAN+3 region and China on CNBC's Squawk Box Asia.
AMRO’s market beta analysis also shows that it might be a bit early to conclude that investor risk perceptions toward US banks have changed decisively.
East Asian companies are more leveraged than their global counterparts. For the 10 member states of ASEAN, the ratio of corporate debt to gross domestic product stood at 80.7% as of March 2023.
AMRO’s estimates show that market stress, which rose in 2022, broadly fell in 2023 as the Fed concluded its monetary tightening and provided indications that monetary easing could start in the next few quarters.