production wobble or a broader slowdown in demand.

Why should I care?

For markets: A split screen GDP report.

The headline looks healthy, but the composition tells you where earnings pressure and support may show up. Service-heavy businesses and manufacturers benefited from solid activity, while energy-linked firms may feel the pinch if lower output persists. Investors will also watch May 15’s details for clues on whether the 4.4% quarterly slide was temporary – and what that implies for Malaysia’s rate outlook and fiscal room.

The bigger picture: Growth is getting less oil dependent.

Malaysia is leaning more on services and downstream industry to offset commodity swings, a pattern seen across many emerging markets. That can make growth steadier over time, but only if productivity keeps up – meaning continued investment in logistics, digital infrastructure, and skills. If those areas deliver, the economy can stay near a 5% pace even when energy production is patchy.