Malaysia to pump in $4.6 billion to bolster stock market

15 Sep, 2015

Malaysia will inject up to $4.6 billion to bolster its stock market and will spend tens of millions of dollars on infrastructure projects to try to stimulate the slowing economy, Prime Minister Najib Razak said Monday. Najib, who is also finance minister, said up to 20 billion ringgit ($4.6 billion) would be used to reactivate the dormant equity investment firm ValueCap, which was set up in 2002 to invest in undervalued local firms.
The country has seen a 9.0 percent plunge in its stock market this year. But Najib's announcement saw the index record its biggest advance in over two years, surging 2.3 percent at the close. "To protect the economy from the risk (of global uncertainty sparked by concerns over China's economy), the government will implement the various measures to maintain the growth momentum," he told reporters.
Malaysia's economy grew at its slowest pace in nearly two years in the second quarter, amid a plummeting currency and political turmoil. Najib said the ringgit had declined 26.3 percent against the dollar compared to a year earlier. Allegations of financial impropriety involving Najib, which he strongly denies, have become the biggest crisis of his six-year tenure. They centre on claims that hundreds of millions of dollars went missing in deals involving state-owned investment company 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), which he launched in 2009.
In July The Wall Street Journal revealed that Malaysian investigators had found nearly $700 million in mysterious deposits in Najib's personal bank accounts. His government has since admitted the deposits were made, calling them "political donations" from Middle Eastern sources but refusing to give further details. It denies they were linked to IMBD. "The government remains committed in helping to complete the investigation in relation to the investments in 1MDB in a transparent way," Najib said Monday. Second-quarter growth was 4.9 percent, down from 6.5 percent in the same period last year, as both exports and private consumption weakened.

Read Comments