(Bloomberg) — Southeast Asia could see higher-than-normal rainfall in the coming months, threatening further disruptions to agriculture, tourism, and industrial output in a region already hit by a series of storms this year. Most Read from BloombergDubai’s Allure to Expats Is Weighing on City’s InfrastructureHow Mexico City Averted All-Out DroughtThe Master Plan That Shaped Pakistan’s Capital Is No Longer WorkingAs Brussels Booms, an Old Boogeyman Returns: BrusselizationThe Cablebus TransformedRead More