Enterprise Explores

BFM Media
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Jan 25, 2026 • 26min

Graduating at 20? The Risks of Rushed Talent

When business leaders talk about the talent crunch, the focus is usually on skills, communication, and job readiness. But Malaysia’s newly launched National Education Plan 2026–2035 introduces a more fundamental shift: time.With education pathways accelerating, students may enter university younger and reach the workforce sooner. While this may look efficient on paper, it raises a harder question for employers. Are we mistaking learning speed for workforce readiness?We speak with Professor Hazel Melanie Ramos, Vice Provost for Teaching and Learning at University of Nottingham Malaysia, to examine what accelerated education timelines really mean for universities, businesses, and Malaysia’s future workforce.We discuss:How the National Education Plan 2026–2035 reshapes the talent pipeline through faster education pathways.What earlier university entry means for student maturity, resilience, and readiness for work.Whether universities can deliver deeper learning in shorter timeframes.The risks employers may face if graduates arrive sooner but less prepared.What shared responsibility between universities and businesses is needed for workforce development.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 22, 2026 • 18min

Competing in Uncertainty: Decisions That Matter

Volatility, AI, and uncertainty are no longer future risks. They are the conditions businesses are operating in right now.Today, we examine what IBM’s 2026 Business and Technology Trends reveal about how organisations are responding to constant disruption. From decision-making at speed and real-time operations, to the shifting role of employees, AI transparency, and the growing importance of control and trust, this conversation looks past hype and into the choices that will shape competitiveness.Dickson Woo, Country General Manager and Technology Leader at IBM Malaysia, talks about where leaders are focusing today, what may be underestimated, and which decisions will ultimately separate those who keep up from those who fall behind.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 21, 2026 • 36min

Divided We Fall? ASEAN Vs Trump Tariffs

Following President Trump’s "Liberation Day" announcement threatening ASEAN with up to 49% tariffs, IDEAS argues that the member states of the 600-million-strong bloc panicked. Vietnam and Cambodia rushed to cut deals immediately, and Malaysia eventually followed suit with the Agreement on Reciprocal Trade (ART), albeit after initial attempts to rally the region failed.We sit down with Dr. Stewart Nixon, author of the report "Divided We Fall," to dissect why ASEAN chose self-preservation over solidarity and the potentially dangerous concessions buried in the fine print.We discuss:The "Panic" Discount: How Vietnam and Thailand’s rush to Washington sparked a regional "arms race" of concessions, handing leverage directly to Trump.Section 5 & Sovereignty: The controversial clause in Malaysia's deal that links trade policy to US national security, effectively forcing Malaysia to police US interests against China within its own borders.The "Transshipment" Trap: Why vague definitions of "circumvention" in the new deal create a compliance nightmare for manufacturers planning their supply chains.Convenor vs. Captain: Why the ASEAN Chair failed to rally the troops, in stark contrast to the EU’s unified stand against Washington.The Illusion of Safety: Dr. Nixon argues that buying "certainty" from Trump is a myth, citing how the USMCA did not protect Canada or Mexico from future tariff threats.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 20, 2026 • 28min

The Grade C Trap: Is Malaysia Benchmarking For The Past?

The Ministry of Education’s Education Blueprint 2026-2035 has officially landed with a clear, mandatory mandate: a Grade C floor for English, BM, Mathematics, and History. But as we enter a decade defined by generative AI and automation, is a static grade on a paper certificate still a valid currency for the Malaysian workforce? Or is the national curriculum benchmarking for a world that no longer exists?We sit down with Edmond Yap, co-founder of Tupai, to deconstruct ‘The Grade C Trap’.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 19, 2026 • 33min

The Fintech-Corporate Matchmaker? Inside PayNet Fintech Hub

Innovation is risky for banks, and traction is expensive for startups. Launched in May 2025, the PayNet Fintech Hub aims to solve this deadlock by acting as the "bridge" between Corporate Malaysia and innovation.BFM speaks with Gary Yeoh (PayNet) and Joshua Lim (Buzz) to explore how this ecosystem works. We dive into the success story of Buzz, a startup that pivoted from green-tech to a B2B financial media network, utilising PayNet's resources to secure a pilot with TNG Digital.We discuss:The "Bridge" Strategy: How PayNet reduces the risk for incumbents (like banks and e-wallets) to experiment with startups by vetting them and absorbing trial costs via PayNet Credits.The Buzz Pivot: Joshua shares the grueling journey of pivoting from a B2C recycling business to a B2B fintech solution, utilising the hub's resources to upgrade their API infrastructure.The "Grocery" Pilot: A deep dive into the Buzz x TNG Digital partnership, a cashback program where users upload offline grocery receipts to the TNG e-wallet for instant rewards.The 2026 Roadmap: Gary outlines the vision for a "B2B App Store" where banks can seamlessly "pull" verified fintech solutions (loyalty, analytics, engagement) directly from a trusted PayNet platform.The Opportunity Wall: How corporates can now post problem statements for the fintech community to solve.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 18, 2026 • 35min

Grok, Bikinis, and Malaysia's Online Safety Act 2025

The timing couldn't have been more scripted. Just as the Online Safety Act (ONSA) 2025 came into force on January 1st, the AI chatbot Grok sparked a controversy by generating inappropriate content, prompting action from Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC).Lawyers Ong Johnson and Lo Khai Yi dissect this new regulatory landscape. We explore whether ONSA is a necessary shield against digital harm or a potential "political tool" for censorship, and what the RM10 million penalty cap means for tech giants operating in Malaysia.We discuss:The "Grok" Precedent: How the recent AI chatbot controversy served as the first real test case for MCMC's new powers under ONSA.Who is Targeted? A breakdown of the three key entities regulated by the act: ASPs (Social Media like X/Facebook), CASPs (Content providers like Netflix/Infotainment), and NSPs (Telcos).The "Teeth" of the Law: Analysing the severe penalties, up to RM10 million for serious non-compliance, and whether this is enough to compel Big Tech to change their platform design.Reporting Mechanisms: The two distinct routes users now have to report harmful content (Direct to Platform vs. Direct to MCMC).The "Proactive" Shift: Why companies must move from reacting to reports to proactively moderating content before the MCMC’s upcoming Code of Practice makes it mandatory.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 15, 2026 • 29min

Cautious Optimism: What Malaysians Really Expect from 2026

It’s a new year, and optimism is starting to creep back in.On this episode of Enterprise Explores, we examine Ipsos Malaysia’s 2026 Predictions report to understand how Malaysians are feeling about the year ahead and what that means for businesses.From confidence in the economy and attitudes towards AI and jobs, to the growing importance of wellbeing and the commercial impact of the 2026 World Cup, the data points to cautious but resilient optimism.Joining us is Arun Menon, Managing Director of Ipsos Malaysia, to help separate sentiment from reality and explain how businesses should respond to shifting expectations, spending behaviour, and emerging risks in a year shaped by hope.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 14, 2026 • 32min

When China Sneezes: The Slowdown Spillover Across APAC

2026 presents a landscape of mixed signals for Asia-Pacific: US tariffs are at their highest levels since the 1930s (effective rate of 13.6%), and China’s growth is projected to slow to 4.1%. Yet, Fitch Ratings has maintained a Neutral outlook for the sector.Thomas Rookmaaker, Head of APAC Sovereigns at Fitch Ratings, joins BFM to break down the region's "two-speed recovery", where AI-driven economies surge while traditional exporters lag, and warns that fiscal buffers are slowly eroding as government debt climbs.We discuss:.The "Neutral" Verdict: Why Fitch maintains a stable sector outlook despite geopolitical headwinds, citing strong FX reserves and credit buffers in developed markets.The "Two-Speed" Recovery: How the AI boom is shielding tech-heavy nations while non-tech exporters face dampened demand from the US and China.The China Slowdown: The impact of China’s downgrade to 'A' and the property slump on the broader region, with spillover effects hitting commodity prices and consumption.Fiscal Erosions & Social Unrest: With median government debt-to-GDP rising to 50.1%, we discuss why fiscal consolidation is stalling and how social unrest (e.g., Nepal, Indonesia) is forcing governments to spend more.Country Watchlist:Malaysia: Rated 'BBB+' (Stable) supported by political stability and 4% growth, though debt reduction remains gradual.Thailand: The outlier with a Negative outlook due to delayed tourism recovery and high household debt.The Danger Zone: Why the Maldives ('CC') faces a critical test with a $500m Sukuk repayment in April.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 13, 2026 • 31min

Suing Trump’s White House: Has Costco Cracked the Code?

In late November, Costco filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over the “Liberation Day tariffs", and the White House remained surprisingly silent.BFM speaks with Bryan DeAngelis of Penta Group to decode this "quiet rebellion." Corporate America is finally "unbending the knee," but they are doing it with a new playbook: filing lawsuits based strictly on business logic while avoiding the public shaming that bruises the President's ego.We discuss:The Costco Strategy: Why the retailer’s decision to sue quietly after Thanksgiving, relying on "brand math" rather than PR stunts, possibly saved them from a Truth Social firestorm.The "Business Lane": How companies are learning to push back against policies like tariffs by framing them strictly as shareholder protection rather than political opposition.Political Volatility & Populism: With the President's poll numbers sinking, Bryan explains why the administration is leaning harder into populist rhetoric (like the attack on institutional housing investors) to regain momentum.The 2026 Midterm Outlook: Why "razor-thin" margins in Congress mean Democrats could flip the House even before November, and how this gridlock will force the President to rule almost exclusively through Executive Orders.The Erosion of Authority: From GOP resignations to state-level defiance on redistricting, we analyse whether the White House is losing its grip on its own party.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Jan 12, 2026 • 30min

Lock In or Lose Out? The Looming Office Supply Crunch

The "buy and wait" era is over. According to Knight Frank Malaysia, 2026 marks a shift toward "value hunting amid volatility." Amy Wong, Executive Director of Research & Consultancy at Knight Frank Malaysia, joins BFM to decode the 2026 outlook. With office supply set to drop by 11% this year and over a third in 2027, the market is approaching a critical "decision year" where tenants lose their leverage. We discuss the rise of a "two-tier market," why industrial rents are staying disciplined despite the China+1 boom, and how investors must now manufacture "alpha" through active asset management.We discuss:The 2025 Scorecard: How front-loaded global trade and domestic consumption kept the market resilient, and why the 2026 "cool-down" is normalisation, not a hangover.Industrial "Smarter Space": Why manufacturers are buying land to build rather than renting. Amy explains the shift from sheer scale to high-spec facilities (higher floor loading, automation readiness) to support supply chain diversification.The Two-Tier Market: How the tech boom and Gen AI are creating a polarisation across sectors. Green, efficient buildings are winning, while older stock faces obsolescence.The Office "Decision Year": With new office supply dropping sharply in 2026 and 2027, the window for tenants to lock in favorable terms is closing. We discuss the "Stay vs. Go" debate for companies in aging buildings.Asset Level Alpha: Why market-driven growth is gone. Amy argues that returns must now be "earned" through active retrofitting and repositioning of older assets, rather than passive holding.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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