{"id":24938,"date":"2016-06-24T14:12:26","date_gmt":"2016-06-24T06:12:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/?p=24938"},"modified":"2017-05-05T17:14:59","modified_gmt":"2017-05-05T09:14:59","slug":"brexit-uk-votes-to-leave-eu","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/brexit-uk-votes-to-leave-eu","title":{"rendered":"How Will Brexit Affect Malaysia?"},"content":{"rendered":"
In a historic referendum, UK has voted to leave the European Union (EU) with\u00a052% of the votes,\u00a0after being in the EU for 43 years.<\/p>\n
Though most of the regions voted on leaving the EU, London and Scotland voted strongly on remaining.<\/p>\n
As the market reacted to the result from the referendum, the pound fell to its lowest level against the dollar since 1985. The fall in sterling marks the biggest one-day fall ever seen and at one point, we witnessed a drop of more than 10%.<\/p>\n
The UK remains one of the top education destinations for Malaysians, and the world in general. According to\u00a0UNESCO statistics<\/a>, the UK is ranked #2 in the top 20\u00a0countries for international students,\u00a0with a total of 427,686 international students.<\/p>\n Malaysians are\u00a0attracted to tertiary education in the UK, which contributes to the rise in property investment in the country.<\/p>\n Though Brexit will\u00a0unlikely affect the quality of the education offered to students, the sliding sterling can be beneficial to many parents who are paying for tuition fees in Sterling — that was about 6x\u00a0to the Malaysian ringgit last month.<\/p>\n At the time of writing, the ringgit was at\u00a05.5586<\/a> to the pound. If the currency continues to slide, Malaysian parents may be able to gain\u00a0a respite from the sliding ringgit.<\/p>\n Due to the UK’s popularity with international students, many Malaysian property investors are looking to invest in student accommodation in the UK.<\/p>\n In fact, Malaysians make up one of the biggest investors in the property market in the UK, especially institutional investors such as the Employees Provident Fund, Retirement Fund Inc. (KWAP) and Armed Forces Fund Board (LTAT).<\/p>\n According to\u00a0Virata Thaivasigamony, head of the team of negotiators of CSI Properties (Cornerstone International), a property real estate investment firm,\u00a073% of overseas Malaysian property investors in 2015<\/a>\u00a0have gone into purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) due to its 8% yields.<\/p>\n However, with the risk of recession post-Brexit as predicted by the\u00a0International Monetary Fund (IMF)<\/a>,\u00a0experts are worried that the\u00a0faltering economy would badly affect property\u00a0prices, thereby hindering the ability to construct more homes, and\u00a0also allowing overseas investors to buy\u00a0property at a lower value.<\/p>\n This could be good news for new Malaysian property investors with holding power, who are looking to break into the UK property market. With the lower currency exchange rate and also lower housing prices, it could be time for these investors to start shopping for a good buy.<\/p>\n However, if this does happen, it will not be favourable to existing property owners. In light of the possible recession, property investment can be difficult, either in rental or in sale.<\/p>\n In quarter one of this year, the UK\u00a0contributed RM1.9 billion of foreign direct investments (FDI) or 9.3% of the total FDI stock. We saw an increase of 54.1% compared with the same period last year.<\/p>\n In the same quarter, the EU was the largest contributor to Malaysia at RM30.3 billion (39.0% of total FDI stock), a rise of 21.8% from last year\u2019s figure.<\/p>\n Experts<\/a>\u00a0do not expect Brexit to affect\u00a0the FDI in Malaysia, as it involves medium- to long-term factors. However,\u00a0MIDF Research predicts that it will significantly impact\u00a0portfolio investments like stocks, bonds, treasuries in the short term.\u201d<\/p>\n \u201cWe opine that Brexit has marginal impact on the economic fundamentals of Malaysia but more on financial markets due to negative sentiment. In the wake of Brexit, investors have fled to safety, which means the dollar, yen and bunds (German bonds), causing yield to plummet,” MIDF told\u00a0The Sun Daily<\/em>.<\/p>\n This can already be seen with the\u00a0performance of the stock market, where we saw a large net outflow of portfolio capital for the past eight weeks, averaging above RM1.0 billion.<\/p>\n Today, when the result was announced, other than the plunging currency, world oil prices also tumbled\u00a0by more than 6%.\u00a0Experts<\/a>\u00a0opine that the reason why the world oil prices took a tumble could be due to risk aversion more than fundamentals.<\/p>\n In Asia, Tokyo stocks slid\u00a0by more than 8% and Japan\u2019s Finance Minister Taro Aso called an emergency news briefing.<\/p>\n<\/span>2. Outward investment to the UK<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n
<\/span>3. Inward investment from the UK<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n
<\/span>4. Trade<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n