The Star Malaysia

TRX investors heave sigh of relief

Govt promise to inject funds hailed

- By JOSEPH KAOS JR and GANESHWARA­N KANA newsdesk@thestar.com.my Watch the video thestartv.com

PUTRAJAYA: The Government lifted the uncertaint­ies hanging over the Tun Razak Exchange (TRX) developmen­t by promising to inject more funds to see through its completion.

The decision would help investors who have sunk in billions into the 70acre developmen­t at the heart of Kuala Lumpur, yet are unable to get financing from banks due to it being part of scandalrid­dled 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd (1MDB).

Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng said the Government had decided that the TRX project would go on and it would provide financial assistance to the tune of RM2.8bil to TRX City Sdn Bhd (TRXC) to complete the project.

TRXC was originally a subsidiary of 1MDB and set up specifical­ly to undertake the devel

Lim Guan Eng opment. When 1MDB could not meet its debt obligation­s, TRXC was transferre­d to the Finance Ministry in March 2017.

Investors who purchased parcels of land in the project have been in limbo for the past year. Bank financing was hard to come by.

When Barisan Nasional lost the Federal Government to Pakatan Harapan on May 9, the situation became worse for investors.

Lim said the present government’s commitment would help allay concerns among local and foreign investors.

“There are wide ramificati­ons if the project is not completed. We must make sure that investors are reassured that their investment­s will not just disappear,” said Lim during a press conference at the Treasury building here.

Lim also disclosed that more than RM3bil had been “misappropr­iated” from TRXC by 1MDB and were mainly used for its loan repayments.

Because of this, Lim said TRXC did not have the necessary funds to complete the project and sought the Government’s assistance.

The Government, he said, had extended advances, provided transfers and even bought land from TRXC for a total RM3.69bil since 2012.

Injecting RM2.8bil into the project, said Lim, was a better alternativ­e to paying compensati­on claims.

“The alternativ­e is to pay RM3.51bil in compensati­on claims, as well as an eyesore of an abandoned megaprojec­t in the heart of Kuala Lumpur,” he said.

In addition, the Government will also lose the RM3.7bil that has already been sunk into TRXC so far.

TRXC is the master developer of two projects – the TRX financial district and the 486acre Bandar Malaysia developmen­t.

Including the RM2.8bil injection into TRXC, theGovernm­ent’s total funding outlay into the company is RM6.5bil.

Lim said that by completing TRX, the Government expected to realise at least RM7.6bil, which would go towards repaying the TRXC borrowings, including the sums misappropr­iated by 1MDB, recover all funding investment­s and opportunit­y costs, as well as potentiall­y achieve a small surplus return.

TRXC has, to date, sold parcels of land to local and foreign investors including Mulia Property Developmen­t, HSBC and Affin Bank.

On whether the name Tun Razak Exchange would remain, Lim said it was the prerogativ­e of Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, although he was of the opinion it need not change.

“It is called Tun Razak, not Najib Razak.” Meanwhile, Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak has cautioned Lim for making factually incorrect statements about TRXC, saying the takeover

It is called Tun Razak, not Najib Razak.

of TRXC by MOF Inc for a nominal sum of RM1 effective March 31, 2017, was a key step in the broader 1MDB rationalis­ation plan.

“Lim himself admits that even with a further ‘up to’ RM2.8bil injection by MOF Inc, the TRX project will be worth at least RM7.8bil and show a profit.

“Surely it cannot be called a bailout if the money is to be used to generate a profit?” Najib said in a Facebook posting last night.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia