This article addresses the queer subjectivities produced under postcolonial capitalism. In a context where economic value is virtualized via currency floats, high-volume trading, and other financial practices, subjectivity is likewise virtualized such that sexual, racial, gender, and ethno-national differences come to be framed as interchangeable and persistently in motion. Putting theories of postcolonial capitalism in conversation with queer diasporic critique, I read Lawrence Chua’s novel Gold by the Inch as an account of the queer contours of multicultural recognition specific to postcolonial Southeast Asia. Focusing on Chua’s extensive use of second person narration and the ethical ambivalence of the novel’s protagonist, I argue that m...