weasel1962, I don't see the T-50 as a serious contender either. A more serious effort would see the Koreans offering more industrial offsets or transfer of technology.
aaaditya, here in Malaysia the NADI group has been working very hard to be in the GOM's good books. If they are successful, we might see additional purchases of the Hawk.
johngage, if the 8 MB339CMs are already a confirmed buy then the M-346 remains a possibility down the road. A buy pattern might be spread out in batches over several 5-year plans. The proposal from Aermacchi include upgrading work for the remaining MB339AMs to keep these flying for another 5 years. AFAIK, this coincides with the service entry date for M-346. So, a possibility is for a batch to replace the AMs 5 years out, a batch to replace half the Hawks 10 years out, another batch yet again to replace the remaining Hawks 15 years out and a final batch to replace the CMs 20 years out.
IMO, a twin-engined LIFT/CAS is better given Malaysia's geography than either the single-engined Hawk or MB339. As I also think that the RMAF will consolidate it's MRCA fleet around the Su-30, the Yak-130's bid would most likely suffer from the GOM's desire to diversify it's source of supply.
TanaTana, nice thoughts. I think the problem with buying the J-10 is that it still introduces an additional platform to maintain despite engine commonality. Also, going forward the F2 and F3 variants of the Saturn might enter RMAF service (I hope). It might impose an engineering challenge as to whether the J-10 can accommodate the new engines(?). I don't know how involved the Chinese aerospace industry will be in these variants. Would it be very difficult to hard-wire the Su-30 to fire the SD-10?