Like other Myanmar companies, though, it has limited access to capital under Myanmar's antiquated financial system, which lacks a corporate-bond market or a major stock exchange.
Geithner came the closest, saying the financial regulatory system needs to be overhauled to include capital and liquidity "shock absorbers" for the most important market actors.
The proposals from Britain's Vickers Commission go a long way to deal with this, dividing a tightly regulated domestic banking system (the bit that puts taxpayers at risk) from a more freewheeling international market for global capital.