Kuala Lumpur · Confidential enquiries, handled by principals

The sectors that anchor the Malaysian market.

A listed-equity transaction is never just a number. Sector judgment — free float, volatility, liquidity, Shariah status, and regulatory standing — shapes what a position can support.

01 · Why sector matters
Capital plus judgment

Listed-equity financing turns on the character of the position.

Two Bursa Malaysia–listed shares of identical market value can support very different financing. Free float, average daily trading value, share-price volatility, ownership concentration, Shariah status, and regulatory standing all differ by sector — and each of them changes what a position can prudently carry.

A bank trades differently from a plantation group; a semiconductor name behaves differently from a hospital operator. We read the underlying business and its place in the market before we read the number on the screen. The coverage below spans the sectors that define Bursa Malaysia, with a note on how position quality and financing considerations shift from one to the next.

02 · Coverage
Across the Bursa universe

Eight sectors, read on their own terms.

From the large-cap banks and plantation names that anchor the FBM KLCI through to growth companies on the ACE Market, our coverage is built on how each industry actually behaves as collateral.

I

Banking & Financial Services

Banking groups, insurers, and financial holding companies. Deep free float and heavy daily turnover make the large names among the most financeable on Bursa, though some carry sector foreign-ownership limits and most are non-Shariah.

II

Plantation

Palm-oil planters and integrated agribusiness. Largely Shariah-compliant and well held by GLICs and founding families; earnings track the CPO cycle, so volatility and float are weighed carefully.

III

Energy & Utilities

Oil & gas services, power, and gas utilities. Regulated utilities offer stability and liquidity, while services and upstream names carry more commodity and contract volatility.

IV

Property, Construction & REITs

Developers, builders, and M-REITs. Free float and trading depth vary widely; M-REIT units behave differently from developer equity and are assessed apart.

V

Consumer Products & Services

Food, beverage, retail, and gloves. Defensive, cash-generative businesses with steady turnover, though several leading names are tightly held by founding families, which concentrates the register.

VI

Healthcare

Hospital groups and pharmaceuticals. Premium hospital operators are stable and well-traded and command deep institutional sponsorship; smaller names demand closer review.

VII

Technology & Semiconductors

Semiconductors, E&E, and automated test equipment. Globally exposed and often Shariah-compliant, but more volatile; liquidity ranges from blue-chip exporters to thinner ACE-listed growth stocks.

VIII

Telecommunications & Media

Mobile operators, towers, and digital. Telcos offer scale and liquidity but carry foreign-ownership limits; media and digital names range more widely and are sized accordingly.

03 · Cross-sector variables
FBM KLCI · FBM 70 · ACE

The structuring questions we ask of every position.

Sector sets the backdrop; the specific position decides the terms. Whether a name sits in the FBM KLCI, the broader FBM 70 and FBM 100, or among the growth companies on the ACE Market, the same variables govern what is possible.

  • 01
    Free float & ADTV. The genuinely tradeable portion of the register and the average daily trading value set the practical ceiling on size, liquidity, and indicative LTV.
  • 02
    Single-name concentration. Founder- and family-held positions in one Bursa counter are our core competence; the size of the holding relative to float is read carefully rather than waved through.
  • 03
    Shariah status. Whether the counter sits on the Securities Commission's Shariah-compliant list shapes whether a Shariah-compliant structure is available and preferred.
  • 04
    Foreign-ownership & Bumiputera limits. Sector caps in banking, telecommunications, and other regulated industries, and any Bumiputera equity conditions, are mapped before terms are issued.
  • 05
    Moratorium & strategic holdings. Post-IPO moratoria, closed periods, and strategic or related-party stakes are identified at the outset, not after.
  • 06
    Index & board context. FBM KLCI, FBM 70, FBM 100, and ACE membership inform expectations on liquidity, volatility, and disclosure, and frame how each position is approached.
04 · Eligibility
Assessed, never assumed

Every position is reviewed on its own merits.

No sector is in or out by category. A blue-chip bank and a thinly-traded ACE growth company are both considered — and both judged on the specifics of the counter, the position, and the structure required.

Sector coverage describes where we work, not a promise of terms. Eligibility is always assessed case by case, against the free float, trading value, volatility, concentration, Shariah status, and disclosure profile of the actual holding. Indicative terms follow review of the specific position — never the sector alone.

Tell us the counter. We will tell you what it can support.

Share the high-level details of your Bursa Malaysia–listed position. A senior principal will review the specifics and reply — usually within one business day.