I report on the commercial engine behind Southeast Asian sport — from sponsorship deals and league structures to stadium financing and event economics. My goal is to explain how money, strategy, and audience behaviour shape the region’s sporting landscape.
Outside work, I’m usually analysing match data, visiting community pitches, or tracking how global sports trends land in ASEAN markets.
I write about the way Southeast Asia moves — through its airports, its festivals, its food streets, and the people who keep its travel corridors alive. My reporting blends cultural storytelling with aviation and tourism economics, offering readers both narrative depth and industry clarity.
When I’m not on assignment, I’m wandering markets, photographing neighbourhoods at dawn, or comparing how different ASEAN cities reinvent themselves through food, design, and public spaces.
I cover Malaysia’s finance and energy beats with an emphasis on central bank policy, corporate governance, commodity markets, and investment flows. My reporting connects domestic policy and corporate moves to regional energy and investment trends.
Outside work I enjoy hiking in the highlands, exploring local food markets, and mentoring early‑career journalists.
Pichaya “P’Chai” Srisuk focuses on Thailand’s tourism and aviation sectors, tracking route economics, hospitality recovery, and the business of events. His work explains how shifts in airline networks, visa rules and destination marketing affect local businesses, jobs and cross-border flows. He combines quantitative analysis with first-hand reporting from airports, hotels and destinations, and values on-the-ground interviews with regulators, airline route planners and tourism entrepreneurs.
Outside reporting he enjoys photographing temples at sunrise, trying new street-food stalls, and weekend hikes.
I cover Vietnam’s economic and industrial developments with a focus on manufacturing, foreign direct investment, port operations, and the country’s digital economy. I aim to connect local policy and corporate moves to broader ASEAN supply‑chain shifts and regional trade dynamics.
When I’m not reporting I enjoy weekend motorbike trips to coastal towns, experimenting with regional recipes, and reading economic history.
I cover the Philippines’ finance and remittance ecosystem, focusing on consumer fintech adoption, microfinance, and how remittance flows affect local economies and household finance.
When I’m not reporting I volunteer with financial literacy programs, explore coastal towns, and collect vintage postcards.
I report on Indonesia’s industrial economy, port operations, logistics, and infrastructure projects, with a focus on how these developments reshape supply chains and investment patterns across ASEAN.
When I’m off deadline I enjoy sailing, visiting industrial museums, and sampling regional street food.
I cover Singapore’s day‑to‑day economic and commercial life: central bank and fiscal policy, port and airport operations, corporate governance, tourism recovery, and the commercial side of major sporting events. I aim to make complex policy and market moves readable and actionable for business leaders, policy watchers, and curious readers across Southeast Asia.
When I’m not reporting I coach youth football, hunt down the best hawker‑centre kopi, and cycle the island’s park connectors.
I am an investment analyst who has spent the last 15 years following how capital, trade, and industrial policy shape businesses across Asia. My career has taken me from Manila to London, Hong Kong, Singapore, and, for the past four years, Jakarta, giving me a practical view of how regional markets behave when macro trends meet real operating conditions.
My work centers on investment analysis with a particular lens on manufacturing and logistics. I pay close attention to factory expansion, port capacity, supply-chain resilience, industrial parks, labor trends, and the policy decisions that influence where production and distribution capabilities are built across Indonesia and the wider Southeast Asian region.
As a Singaporean product veteran with two decades of experience, my journey has been deeply rooted in financial services and the wider business economy around it. I’ve had the privilege of building and scaling products across retail banking, cross-border payments, wealth management, and digital lending, while working closely with risk, treasury, and regulatory teams. This exposure gives me a practical lens on how finance and technology decisions affect real operating outcomes for firms and households.
With one foot in Silicon Valley’s innovation hub and the other firmly planted in humanitarian concerns, I’ve dedicated my career to ensuring AI development remains ethical, inclusive, and beneficial for humanity. After completing my dual master’s degrees in Computer Science and Philosophy at Stanford, I spent five years at a leading AI research institute before launching my independent consultancy.
My work spans from advising Fortune 500 companies on responsible AI implementation to collaborating with policy makers on regulatory frameworks that balance innovation with human welfare. I specialize in identifying potential ethical pitfalls in AI systems before they reach deployment and developing frameworks that ensure technology augments human potential rather than diminishes it.