The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

PNB wants to hold less cash

Chairman: 15% of assets in cash will do

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s largest stateowned fund manager is looking to hold less cash even as it struggles to make acquisitio­ns that would generate attractive returns.

A fifth of Permodalan Nasional Bhd RM266bil of assets under management is in cash and money markets, and chairman Tan Sri Abdul Wahid Omar said in an interview that the fund could reduce such holdings by at least five percentage points.

That would free up about RM13.3bil, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns.

“Whilst we need to maintain a certain level of cash, it doesn’t have to be 20%,” said Wahid, a former cabinet minister who joined PNB a year ago.

“We can easily go down below.”

Still, the ringgit is among factors holding PNB back from being more aggressive with acquisitio­ns.

The currency remains “relatively weak,” Wahid said recently, declining to specify what he thinks is a fairer value for the exchange rate.

Earlier this year, the ringgit declined to levels not seen since the Asian financial cri- to 15% and sis of the late 1990s.

It has rebounded and was at 4.29 per dollar on Friday.

“The last thing you want is that you invest in a US dollar asset at 4.30 and within a year, the ringgit strengthen­s, by say, 5%,” Wahid said.

That would render returns lower when earnings are converted back to the local currency and PNB is “mindful of that kind of situation,” he said.

Set up by the government in 1978 to help boost the wealth of the country’s ethnic Malay and indigenous people, PNB remains heavily invested in Malaysia - home to 98% of its assets.

The fund hasn’t raised its offshore holdings also in part because of a lack of attractive investment­s, Wahid said.

“At the right time, at the right opportunit­y, then we will make those investment­s,” he said. Even then, PNB isn’t likely to hold more than 10% of its assets overseas because its liabilitie­s are in ringgit, he said.

“It is very important for us to continue to invest mainly in Malaysia, not only from the asset-liability perspectiv­e, but also from the economic multiplier perspectiv­e,” the chairman said.

About 69% of PNB’s money is invested in equities. The fund may shift some of its cash into fixed income, private equity and property - segments which currently make up just over a tenth of holdings.

The fund wants to boost its assets under management to RM350bil by 2022, Wahid said.

PNB owns stakes in some of the nation’s biggest companies including Malayan Banking Bhd, Sime Darby Bhd and UMW Holdings Bhd. Its domestic equity investment­s of RM180bil is equivalent to about 10% of the local stock exchange’s market capitalisa­tion.

It’s also constructi­ng what will be Malaysia’s highest tower, with a completion date by the end of 2020, Wahid said.

PNB is targeting an initial public offering of its infrastruc­ture unit - Projek Lintasan Kota Holdings Sdn Bhd - in 2019, Wahid said.

Another possibilit­y is the listing of its real estate investment trust, though there is no definite plan to do so right now, he said.— Bloomberg

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