Malaysia's decade-old push for Mid-East investments stumbles
The government’s decade-old plan to attract investors from the Middle East is not playing out well, according to a report in the Straits Times of Singapore today.
Several major middle eastern investors, who had earlier indicated pouring in millions into Malaysia, have since withdrawn.
Saudi Aramco is the latest of several major middle eastern companies to have aborted planned investments in Malaysia, largely due to global economic conditions, a US$27 billion (RM119 billion) refinery and petrochemical joint-venture development in Pengerang, Johor, with state-owned Petronas, says report.
Arab involvement in Medini fizzled out after the 2008 global financial crisis and the investments were subsequently taken over by private Malaysian interests.
Other major Arab-led projects in Malaysia “that have been quietly axed in recent years include plans by Abu Dhabi business groups to invest in a US$7 billion oil storage facility in Johor, and a US$4.2 billion aluminium smelter project in Sarawak.
Abu Dhabi investors had pulled out from 1MDB’s multibillion-dollar Tun Razak Exchange ( TRX) real estate development following problems between 1MDB and Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum Investment Company.
At the same time, Abu Dhabi's IPIC is demanding US$6.5 billion from the Malaysian state fund after it defaulted on a multibillion-dollar financial assistance arrangement.
http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/malaysias-decade-old-push-for-mid-east-investments-stumbles
The government’s decade-old plan to attract investors from the Middle East is not playing out well, according to a report in the Straits Times of Singapore today.
Several major middle eastern investors, who had earlier indicated pouring in millions into Malaysia, have since withdrawn.
Saudi Aramco is the latest of several major middle eastern companies to have aborted planned investments in Malaysia, largely due to global economic conditions, a US$27 billion (RM119 billion) refinery and petrochemical joint-venture development in Pengerang, Johor, with state-owned Petronas, says report.
Arab involvement in Medini fizzled out after the 2008 global financial crisis and the investments were subsequently taken over by private Malaysian interests.
Other major Arab-led projects in Malaysia “that have been quietly axed in recent years include plans by Abu Dhabi business groups to invest in a US$7 billion oil storage facility in Johor, and a US$4.2 billion aluminium smelter project in Sarawak.
Abu Dhabi investors had pulled out from 1MDB’s multibillion-dollar Tun Razak Exchange ( TRX) real estate development following problems between 1MDB and Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum Investment Company.
At the same time, Abu Dhabi's IPIC is demanding US$6.5 billion from the Malaysian state fund after it defaulted on a multibillion-dollar financial assistance arrangement.
http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/malaysias-decade-old-push-for-mid-east-investments-stumbles