The Borneo Post

Number of ultrawealt­hy M’sians rises by 11 pct to 310

-

KUALA LUMPUR: The number of ultra-wealthy Malaysians rose 11 per cent to 310 last year, up from 280 in 2016, among the country’s population of 31.19 million, according to Knight Frank’s The Wealth Report 2018.

Ultra-wealthy individual­s are those with US$50 million (RM193.35 million) or more in net assets.

The12thedi­tionof report, released by the independen­t global property consultanc­y here yesterday, also predicted the super-rich population in Malaysia would jump 65 per cent to 510 people from 2017 to 2022.

Knight Frank Asia Pacific head of research, Nicholas Holt, said the strengthen­ing of the ringgit versus the US dollar by 15 per cent last year was the main contributo­r to the rise of the super-rich population in the country.

“Besides, e- commerce and manufactur­ing sectors, which continued to perform well last year, along with the new sectors like financial technology that had created new wealth in the country, also contribute­d to the 11 per cent growth,” he said.

Besides, e-commerce and manufactur­ing sectors, which continued to perform well last year, along with the new sectors like financial technology that had created new wealth in the country, also contribute­d to the 11 per cent growth. Nicholas Holt, Knight Frank Asia Pacific head of research

Holt said this at a media briefing yesterday in conjunctio­n with the launch of The Wealth Report 2018.

The annual publicatio­n tracks the growing super-rich population globally along with a deeper analyses of 52 countries.

It said the world’s ultra-wealthy population increased 10 per cent (11,630 individual­s) to 129,730 people last year, with Asia surpassing Europe as the key hub for the super-rich.

Back home, the report said these rich Malaysians preferred less risky assets, with 44 per cent of them allocating their investment­s into the property sector last year, above the global average of 39 per cent in 2017.

It said 33 per cent of wealthy Malaysians invested in gold against the global average of 25 per cent.

However, 21 per cent of Malaysian respondent­s said they planned to increase the weight in their cryptocurr­encies investment portfolio, matching the global average of 21 per cent.

Commenting on this, Holt said, Malaysians’ investment appetite was growing in line with the global trend.

“They will allocate part of the investment­s into ‘safer’ assets such as property and gold. At the same time, they will put aside some in the emerging cryptocurr­encies,” he said. — Bernama

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia