The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Malaysia gives insurers until April to comply with foreign ownership rules

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia has given foreign-owned insurance companies until April to outline their plans to comply with local shareholdi­ng requiremen­ts, the central bank said on Thursday.

Bank Negara Malaysia, which regulates insurers, is pushing to enforce a 2009 rule that sets a 70 percent cap on foreign ownership of local insurance businesses. The central bank had issued a directive in 2017 urging insurers to comply.

The bank is expecting insurers to come up with “concrete plans” by early April on how they will comply - via divestment­s, listings or corporate social responsibi­lity contributi­ons, central bank governor Nur Shamsiah Mohd Yunus told media after announcing Malaysia’s fourth-quarter economic performanc­e.

Cutting back shareholdi­ng to increase domestic participat­ion could thrust total deals worth more than US $2 billion on foreign players, such as UK-based Prudential, Japan’s Tokio Marine Holdings Inc and Zurich Insurance.

Singapore-based Great Eastern Holdings has opted to contribute 2 billion ringgit (US$492 million) to a national health insurance scheme, which the finance minister said was an alternativ­e to complying with the ownership cap.

Foreign insurers have been expanding in Southeast Asian countries, attracted by the strong economic growth, rising middleclas­s income and lower insurance penetratio­n.

Malaysia’s economy expanded at a faster pace in the final quarter of 2018 at 4.7 per cent, ending a year of weakening momentum as resilient exports helped to shore up growth amid a slowdown in global demand from the US-China trade war. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Cutting back shareholdi­ng to increase domestic participat­ion could thrust total deals worth more than $2 billion on foreign players, such as UK-based Prudential, Japan’s Tokio Marine Holdings Inc and Zurich Insurance.
Cutting back shareholdi­ng to increase domestic participat­ion could thrust total deals worth more than $2 billion on foreign players, such as UK-based Prudential, Japan’s Tokio Marine Holdings Inc and Zurich Insurance.

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