Myanmar

Banking & Cash Management Challenges in South East Asia

Report date: 
10 Jul 2025

Commentary

ASEAN (The Association of South East Asian Nations) has a population of over 600 million. This is more than the EU (450m) or the United States (340m). Its ten member states provide an impressive level of diversity, for history and culture, but also in politics, economic development and prosperity. The broad range of rules and approaches make it a challenge to manage treasury operations. But the population, economic dynamism and key role in global supply chains make it a crucial player in world trade.

The pattern on this call is not a surprise: Singapore is the most advanced and open economy in ASEAN. For most companies, it is part of their international cash pooling and sweeping mechanisms, along with Hong Kong, Australia and, to some extent, China. The Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand are open economies, but they generally require FX to be executed onshore, and cash pooling is usually via intercompany loans: automated sweeping is not allowed. Vietnam remains more difficult. Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos, continue to be highly regulated and short of hard currency. 

Despite their FX restrictions, several countries have incentives for MNCs to set up Regional Treasury Centres (RTCs). These are usually able to transact outside the exchange controls – usually excluding domestic transactions.

Cash pooling: Singapore is the only country in ASEAN where cross-border cash pooling does not present any issues. Regional cash pools are usually based there or in Hong Kong. Most of the other countries allow domestic pooling and sweeping, though experiences vary. They typically do not allow automated cross border pooling, which is instead achieved by making intercompany loans, usually manually, and subject to various approvals. 

Exchange controls: most ASEAN currencies are convertible, at least for goods imports. However, in many cases (again, excluding Singapore), the FX trade has to be executed onshore, with the USD or EUR then transferred outside the country. These trades are usually done from an offshore location. Thai baht can be paid out of Thailand, but the regulation is not ...

 

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Corporate Treasury Approaches to Managing Geopolitical Risk

Report date: 
8 Mar 2024

Commentary

Geopolitical risk, or simply political risk, is a major challenge for treasurers. We had all become used to viewing Iran, North Korea and Myanmar as off limits, and handling issues in Venezuela and Argentina. But the Russian invasion of Ukraine and escalating trade tensions between the US, the EU and China have made the world a more dangerous place.

This call was scheduled at the request of one member, who was looking for ways to measure political risk, or at least get external indicators they can use to convince management to tread carefully. More on that below. But we quickly moved to discussing what to do, once you have identified the risk. After all, if management wants to do business in a risky country, treasury has to make it happen. 

Generally, peers participated in senior level discussions on strategy and objectives, but felt their main contribution was through managing the balance sheet:

  • Cash repatriation: the main way treasurers can reduce immediate risk is by repatriating restricted and trapped cash. This often involves a cost: withholding tax in the case of dividends, or creating accounting losses on currency conversion. Tax departments and CFOs have to be persuaded this is the right thing to do. Several participants regularly circulate the amount of trapped cash by country to the business, and even the board of directors: this helps change attitudes.
  • Change the business model: this is more difficult, but it can involve moving to invoicing in hard currency to reduce FX risk, or moving to selling through remarketers. One participant has moved from a single manufacturing location in China to multiple production sites in different regions. This was partly due to COVID disruptions and supply chain concerns, but it also addresses the potential exposure due to increasing tensions with China. 
  • Change the funding structure: in some markets, participants have moved from funding via intercompany loans from offshore locations to onshore external borrowing. This reduces the net exposure – provided the company is willing to walk away from the local debt in a crisis. In turn, that raises a series of issues – but at least, it gives more options. It is often more expensive.
  • Manage the accounting exposure: some

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