(Reporting by Yantoultra Ngui; Editing by Anshuman Daga and David Holmes)
By Yantoultra Ngui
End-of-day quote
Other stock markets
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5-day change | 1st Jan Change | ||
7.46 MYR | +0.81% | +0.13% | +7.96% |
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SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Malaysia's crowded banking sector can benefit from mergers and acquisitions, executives from the country's top investment funds told a conference on Monday, seeing opportunities to cut costs and compete with new entrants into the industry. "There are benefits for further consolidation," Rick Ramli, Permodalan Nasional Bhd's (PNB) chief investment officer for private and strategic investments, told a conference organised by stock exchange operator Bursa Malaysia and Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank). "There are still sub-scale banks, as you think about higher compliance costs (and) non traditional competition, you do need to invest and scale up," Rick said, also noting investments were needed in core systems and technology to upgrade to digital platforms. The comments come as Malaysia's banking industry is set to get yet more competitive following the issuance of five digital banking licenses by the central bank at the end of April. Citing sources, Reuters reported last week that Malaysia's second-richest man Quek Leng Chan is weighing options for his stake in Hong Leong Bank, including a merger. Amir Hamzah Azizan, CEO at the Employees Provident Fund (EPF), said Malaysia's banking sector had about 26 firms, with the top five lenders commanding a combined market share of about 48%. "It is probably a segment that is probably due for some form of reconsolidation," he said. Sovereign wealth fund Khazanah Nasional Managing Director Amirul Feisal Wan Zahir also said consolidation was logical but it depended on timing and pricing. "It makes a lot of sense for people to merge and we ... see various permutations of that happening," he said. EPF is the top shareholder in RHB Bank Bhd with a 42.1% stake, besides holding minority stakes in other lenders including Hong Leong Bank and Public Bank Bhd, according to Refinitiv data. PNB is the top shareholder in Maybank, the country's largest bank, with a 46.6% stake, while Khazanah is the biggest shareholder of second-ranked lender CIMB Group Holdings Bhd with a 24.8% stake.
(Reporting by Yantoultra Ngui; Editing by Anshuman Daga and David Holmes)
By Yantoultra Ngui
Price
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Change
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5d. change
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Capi.
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19.36 MYR | -0.10% | +0.21% | 8.39B | ||
9.65 MYR | -0.41% | +1.05% | 24.61B | ||
6.55 MYR | +0.77% | 0.00% | 14.76B | ||
5.64 MYR | 0.00% | -0.35% | 5.11B | ||
4.21 MYR | -0.94% | -0.24% | 17.27B | ||
2.72 USD | -9.93% | -6.53% | 36.04M | ||
1st Jan change | Capi. | |
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+7.96% | 1.28B | |
+7.01% | 78.69B | |
+2.33% | 64.11B | |
+1.69% | 37.92B | |
-15.00% | 36.81B | |
+8.53% | 36.59B | |
+51.86% | 26.95B | |
-17.59% | 13.45B | |
+12.14% | 10.14B | |
-25.13% | 8.3B |