accelerated to grow. Regarding domestic demand, private consumption slowed down as a declining household income and employments, particularly in export-related manufacturing sectors. According to the slowdown
E_1 Legal_FA_2015_12_29-c A brWCorpL.1hig A Executive Summary Management Discussion and Analysis For the Quarter Ended March 31, 2018 In the first quarter of 2018, Thai economic growth gained traction, buoyed by both domestic and international factors. However, the business sector faced rising challenges, namely various forms of competition, a borderless marketplace within the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC), and the advancing digital age amid the rapid pace of technological advancement, thus lea...
C ha ng e ( pe rce nt) 2 on financial transactions via digital channels and declining insurance premiums. Non-performing loans to total loans in this quarter was stable from the end of the prior
first-car subsidy. However, household debt, which rose by 5.7 percent from the end of 2017 to Baht 12.3 trillion as of the second quarter of 2018, together with declining prices for agricultural products
, performance improved from both the Biodiesel Business and the Fuel Ethanol Business. However, the Biodiesel Business was still suffered from inventory loss from the declining of the crude palm oil price. The
and according to target. In 2019, Thai economy has decelerated with GDP reported at 2.4% decreased from 4.1% in 2018 as a result of declining in export growth and Baht appreciation. The world-trade
target. The Green Road scenario gets the closest, with emissions declining 21% by 2030. • Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI) pathways have emissions pathways for both the autos and airline sectors. We
satisfactory economic growth, many key nations such as Japan and China recorded a slowdown. The Eurozone was fragile while Russia faced economic problems and currency volatility from sharply declining crude oil
E_1 Legal_FA_2015_12_29-c A brWCorpL.1hig A Executive Summary Management Discussion and Analysis For the Quarter Ending March 31, 2020 The Thai economy in the first quarter of 2020 sank into a recession due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Economic activity was crippled almost across the board in light of lockdown measures implemented in several countries to contain the viral transmission. Financial markets went into a tailspin, whereas turbulence was seen in manufacturing, service and tourism sectors,...
rates to be on a volatile course. The Thai Baht steadily strengthened in line with other regional currencies while interest rates were declining, which could be attributed mainly to capital influx into