Nazir Razak said to plan US$1bil SEA fund
KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Seri Nazir Razak, chairman of CIMB Group Holdings Bhd and brother of Malaysia’s prime minister, is helping start a regional private equity fund that will seek as much as US$1bil, people with knowledge of the matter said.
Nazir will keep his role at CIMB, Malaysia’s second-largest bank, while acting as one of the fund’s five partners, according to the people.
He will be joined by Kenny Kim, who previously worked under Nazir as chief financial officer of CIMB, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private.
David Heng, who recently resigned from his role as a senior managing director at Temasek Holdings Pte, will also help direct investments at the new fund, the people said. The fund, which isn’t connected to CIMB, will be based in Singapore, according to one of the people.
It plans to target investments in the consumer, technology, logistics and financial services industries in South-East Asia, the person said.
Private equity deals in South-East Asia have more than doubled to US$37.4bil this year, from US$16.4bil during the same period in 2016, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
An investor group agreed in July to pay US$11.6bil for Singapore warehouse operator Global Logistic Properties Ltd in Asia’s biggest-ever buyout, the data show.
Gita Irawan Wirjawan, who was Indonesian trade minister under the country’s last president, and former Philippine finance secretary Cesar Purisima will also be partners at the new fund, the people said.
The five partners are planning to seek about US$700mil to US$1bil from investors, according to one of the people. Deliberations are at an early stage, and details could change, the people said.
A spokeswoman for CIMB declined to comment. A representative for Temasek said Heng will be leaving the Singapore state investment company at the end of this year to pursue other opportunities.
Nazir, 50, and the other four partners either said they have no comment or couldn’t be reached for comment.
South-East Asia has emerged as a strong manufacturing alternative to China, helped by lower labour costs, growing domestic demand and improvements in infrastructure. Gross domestic product in the Asean surged to US$2.6tril in 2016, about the size of the UK’s economy, from a mere US$37.6bil in 1970.
Growth in Asean is seen at 4.9% next year, with Myanmar, Vietnam and the Philippines posting the fastest expansions in the region, according to BMI Research.