Bloomberg
Malaysian assets are back in favor as investors focus on encouraging signs of an economic turnaround instead of a scandal that has touched the top of government and as far as Hollywood.
The stark shift means that Prime Minister Najib Razak, who has weathered political attacks and protests going back to 2015 over allegations involving state-owned 1Malaysia Development Bhd., may call an early election to cement his hold on power.
The ringgit is easily the strongest major Asian currency this quarter, climbing twice as much as the next best, the Chinese yuan. Global funds have bought the most Malaysian stocks year-to-date since the same period in 2013, and net inflows to the bond market surged in April and May.
Malaysia has been rocked by far-reaching investigations into investment fund 1MDB, yet double-digit acceleration in the country’s exports has lifted the economy, which grew 5.6 percent on-year in the first quarter, the most since early 2015.
“With improving macro-economic conditions in Malaysia, we became more positive in mid-2017 for the general Malaysia outlook, although there are still political and corruption concerns,†said Hakan Aksoy, a fund manager at Pioneer Investment Management Ltd., which oversees $244 billion globally.
“As long as we see improvement on the macro data with the support of global conditions and stable energy prices, we will keep our cautiously positive stance for Malaysia,†London-based Aksoy said.
Overseas investors have purchased $2.48 billion of Malaysian equities this year, the biggest stock inflow in Southeast Asia. The FTSE Bursa Malaysia index hit its highest in two years on June 16 as technology, banks and construction shares soared.
Samsung Asset Management is buying Malaysian banking, property and construction stocks on bets the government will pump prime ahead of the election, according to Hong Kong-based fund manager Alan Richardson. Meanwhile, it’s paring technology and commodity-related holdings.
“Domestic cyclicals will outperform while global cyclicals will underperform,†Richardson said. This is due to
“a combination of global monetary stimulus and domestic early election stimulus.â€
The stock market’s gains came as the ringgit rebounded from a 19-year low. After missing out on an earlier rally in regional currencies, it strengthened as growth quickened and concerns eased over an earlier move by the central bank to deter currency speculators. The ringgit was 4.2943 per dollar as of 10:51 a.m. in Kuala Lumpur, up 0.1 percent from Wednesday.
Bond investors have also returned. Malaysian debt securities drew more than 16 billion ringgit ($3.7 billion) in April and May after recording the longest stretch of outflows in two years. The yield on 10-year notes has fallen 57 basis points to 3.89 percent since reaching an eight-year high in November.