Chun Weng
š SpaceX, the worldās biggest IPO is coming to Malaysia!
Hereās what youāll need to know and do to take advantage of this event.
As Malaysians, we canāt access the IPO directly yet, but there are still ways to get exposure before it happens through related industries and ETFs.
And hereās exactly how to do it with moomoo!
š Exclusive rewards for my followers:
1ļøā£ Open a new moomoo account via the link in my bio
2ļøā£ BEFORE your first deposit, search āSpecial Depositā in the app
3ļøā£ Enter code: CHUN88
4ļøā£ Deposit at least RM1,000
ā
Exclusive RM150 reward package
ā
Up to RM1,900 worth of rewards
ā
RM100 worth of free SpaceX shares
š¬ Comment SPACEX and Iāll send you the steps + reward guide!
ā« Cloud Nine by Hayden Folker | / hayden-folker
Licenced under: CC-BY 3.0 Unported
Foreigners are quietly choosing Malaysia. And the reason isnāt because itās the best⦠itās because it offers something most countries are losing.
The goal is wealth not stuff, wealth works for you when you sleep and stuff makes you work without sleep.
Most people think having more cash in the bank makes them safer. But keeping too much money there might actually make you poorer over time.
Malaysia figured out how to produce near zero-waste palm oil.
So why are Western brands still boycotting it?
Malaysia supplies ~25% of the worldās palm oil.
Yes ā deforestation used to be a real problem.
But hereās what changed:
Today, waste doesnāt get thrown away.
Shells and fibres generate electricity.
Empty fruit bunches become fertiliser.
Even wastewater is turned into biogas.
What used to be pollution is now reused.
And hereās the part nobody talks about:
Palm oil is insanely efficient.
It produces 4ā10x more oil per hectare than soy or sunflower.
Meaning you need far less land to produce the same amount.
So in theory, better palm oil = less deforestation.
But walk into any supermarket and youāll see:
āPalm oil free.ā
Sounds ethical.
Feels responsible.
But is it?
Because replacing palm oil often means using crops that need more land, more water, and more resources.
So instead of supporting producers that improvedā¦
companies just avoid palm oil entirely ā
and turn it into a clean, simple marketing message.
16/04/2026
Modern slavery in Malaysia doesnāt look like chains anymore. It looks like upgrades.
A lot of people think World War 3 wouldnāt affect Malaysia.
Because weāre not directly involved.
But thatās not really how the world works.
Malaysia is a trading nation.
Our economy depends heavily on global trade.
And we sit next to one of the most important shipping routes in the world ā the Strait of Malacca.
A huge percentage of global oil and goods pass through here every day.So even if the fighting happens far away, the impact still reaches us.
If tensions rise:
Oil prices go up.
Shipping costs go up.
Businesses here pay more ā
Groceries get more expensive.
Delivery gets more expensive.
Running a business gets more expensive.
Then comes the currency.
When the world gets nervous, money flows into āsaferā assets.
And the ringgit can weaken.
Which makes imports even more expensive.
Then businesses pull back.
Hiring slows.
Expansion pauses.
Cash is held.
So no ā we might not see bombs falling here.
But global instability?
Youāll feel it in everyday life.
I started looking into the average Malaysianās finances. And some of these numbers honestly shocked me.
What car can you actually afford based on your salary? The answer might be very different from what most people are actually buying.
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