Showing 1 - 7 of 7
Business, Benjamin Mullin & Emily Glazer & Meghan Bobrowsky, Published on 21/12/2021
» Covid-19's accelerating spread has hampered operations and slowed sales at some companies in a matter of days, but many say they hope precautions adopted during previous surges will help them motor through this one.
Business, Emily Glazer & Alexander Gladstone & Becky Yerak, Published on 14/09/2021
» Hertz Global Holdings Inc. is in talks to name a new chief executive officer, as the car-rental company resets after emerging from bankruptcy under new ownership, people familiar with the matter said.
Business, Emily Chow, Published on 29/09/2019
» Benchmark palm oil prices may rise to 2,500 ringgit ($597) a tonne by March 2020, according to forecasts by industry analyst Dorab Mistry, as dry weather across Southeast Asia limits output of the edible oil.
Business, Calvin Wilkinson, Published on 05/01/2019
» Some financial commentators have written 2018 off as a disappointment. Among other things, they lament the lower number of initial public offerings (IPOs) compared with 2017, and an annual drop of 190 points, or 10.8%, in the SET index.
Business, Calvin Wilkinson, Published on 17/12/2018
» The private limited company is still a relatively new concept in Thailand; the earliest laws dealing with companies were only passed in 1900, and one of the first corporations in Thailand, Siam Commercial Bank, was only formally established in 1906. Prior to this, businesses were usually organised as family partnerships that lacked any formal legal personality.
Business, Calvin Wilkinson, Published on 13/12/2018
» Before the blood dries from the first phase of Thailand's "regulatory guillotine" project, which has been credited with raising the country's World Bank Doing Business ranking from 48th in 2017 to 26th in 2018, the government is already looking to begin its second phase.
Business, Calvin Wilkinson, Published on 18/10/2018
» You don't need to be a demographer to know that the Thai community is rapidly ageing. When the current generation entering the workforce now moves through to retirement, there will be more than twice as many Thais aged 65 years or older as there are today. And they will be relying upon the people in the workforce, their children, to provide the standard of living in retirement many have come to expect, except that there will be more than twice as many of them.