@zexsy
You should also include the Red Sea and North Atlantic scores if you are looking at his foreign DNA.
I think the OP's Oceanian and a lot of the South Asian (this component is pretty mixed) scores are actually local and not foreign.
Because if you compare him with this ethnic Kadazan-Dusun (i believe so based on the lastname), an indigenous Austronesian tribe from Sabah, Malaysia, the latter also possess Oceanian and even some South Asian, but much less than the OP.
Eurogenes K13
Admix Results (sorted):
# Population Percent
1 East_Asian 86.97
2 South_Asian 6.18
3 Oceanian 3.64
4 Siberian 1.95
5 Baltic 0.56
6 Sub-Saharan 0.38
7 East_Med 0.27
8 Amerindian 0.04
I think most of the South Asian score of this Kadazan-Dusun individual is a Negrito/AASI (Ancient Ancestral South Indian)-like affinity rather than actual South Asian admixture. However, this sample also score noise levels of Baltic and East Med so maybe there's some very little Caucasoid in this Kadazan-Dusun as well.
@zexsy
Sorry I don't follow what you mean?
Well I was able to guess based on his DNA results. Also his lastname indicates that he has Indian origin. And the fact that he has African ancestry which is most likely Bantu/Swahili from East Africa at 14% of his genome makes me think that its likely come from his Indian rather than his Malay side. This is because there used to be a lot of Arab and Indian especially Gujarati merchants in East Africa like Kenya, Tanzania and many of them settled down and intermarried with the local Swahilis.
Furthermore, he has a distant relative who is from Mombasa, Kenya so I'm now pretty convinced that the Afro blood is from his Indian side rather than his SE Asian side.
what I meant was, he is obviously biracial or tri-racial. so it will be hard to guess his race.