BURSA MALAYSIA BERHADbursa.listedcompany.com/misc/NomuraInvestmentForumTokyo_02D… · Nomura Investment Forum, Tokyo. 30 November - 2 December 2009. The Preferred Investment Destination
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Visit us at http://www.bursamalaysia.com
BURSA MALAYSIA BERHAD
Nomura Investment Forum, Tokyo30 November - 2 December 2009
The Preferred Investment Destination
Bursa Malaysia and its Group of Companies (the Company) reserve all proprietary rights to the contents of this Presentation.
Whilst the Company endeavours to ensure that the contents in the presentation booklet are accurate, complete or have been obtained from sources believed by the Company to be accurate and reliable, neither the Company nor the Presenter make any warranty, express or implied, nor assume any
legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness or currency of the contents of this Presentation.
In no event shall the Company be liable for any claim, howsoever arising, out of or in relation to this presentation booklet to the recipient of this presentation booklet and/or to any other third party.
2 Markets: Main Market : 845 cos ACE Market : 115 cos
Equities
TradingListing Clearing Settlement Depository
Integrated Products and Services
Bond Market
Total Market Capitalisation : USD294 bn (RM996 bn) @ 24 November 2009
Strong Niche In Islamic and Commodities
electronic trading platform for : Government Bonds Corporate Bonds
Non-ringgit securities Islamic Sukuk cross
listing
Offshore Market
Business DirectionBursa’s Velocity Target (Mid-term) : 60%
4
Continue Growing Core Business
(Equity & Derivatives)
Establishing a niche in Islamic Capital Market
Attractive Investment &
Listing Destination
Building on advantage in Commodities Market
5
Key Focus and Initiatives
Multicurrency ETFs
Implementation of Main and ACE Markets
Restructuring of minimum bids/spread size
Introduction of SBL-Negotiated Trade
Approval from CFTC, United States
Asean LinkMarket Making-Derivatives
FTSE BM Palm Oil Plantation Index Series
Market Making-Structured Warrants & ETFs
More Proprietary Day Traders
Multicurrency Securities Framework
KLCI Conversionto FTSE
Foreign IPOs
Launched in 2009
In The Pipeline
* Previously referred to as Bursa Commodity House
*
IMPROVING ACCESSIBILITY
NEW PRODUCTS & SERVICES
STRENGTHENING LIQUIDITY
INTERNATIONALISING MARKETS
Collaboration with CME
**
** CFTC approval to enable US investors to trade directly in our financial derivatives products
Direct Market Access - Equity
Continued Educationfor Retail
Internet TradingMarket Chat
6
Malaysian Market Liberalisation
Country
Recognition & Competitiveness
Free Capital Mobility& Improved Access to
Capital Market
New Economic Model - high value & high income Increasing private sector role in driving business Creating a conducive environment for entrepreneurship Focus on developing Human Capital & Innovation
4th for Investor Protection(World Bank)
10th for Resilience in crisis(Sevcorp Int’l Business Confidence Survey)
25th amongst 134 countries for Corporate Governance Framework (World Economic Forum)
25th among 127 Economies(Forbes Best Countries For Business Ranking)
Access for Foreign Participation No restrictions on international
investments in Malaysia. Free to repatriate capital, profits and
income.
Liberalised entry and ownership for
foreign players in the capital market. Foreign Listings
On country Watch List for FTSE Global Equity Index Series: Advanced Emerging
7
Liberalising Access for Foreign Participation
Foreign Shareholding for stockbroking firm raised to 70% New licenses for foreign brokers
Global players present in all segments of the Malaysian Capital Market
Issuance of bonds and sukuk in RM or non-RM 3 Chinese companies already listed – strong indications of more
to come
Issuer Amt (RM mil)
Industrial Bank of Korea 1,300
Exim Bank of Korea 1,220
OCBC Ltd 1,600
Gulf Investment Corp GSC 1,000
State Bank of India 500
KFW Bankengruppe 1,100
ADB 1,000
Notable foreign issuers of RM bonds
Continue to open access to capital market to attract foreign players
• The Company has sufficient financial resources to cover its CAPEX, Clearing Guarantee Fund commitment and working capital. Excess cash will be conserved amidst market uncertainties.
• Aim to cut budgeted operating expenses and capital expenditure by 15%.
Commentary
Capital Expenditure
Shareholders’ Fund
Financial Resources Available for Use RM 426 million @ USD 122 million
RM 742 million @ USD 213 million
RM 20 million @ USD 6 million
Annualised Return On Equity * 14.7%
* Annualised ROE is based on 9 months returns
High Dividend Payout Maximizing Value to Shareholders, Payout Policy 75%
14
FINANCIAL YEAR
2009Interim Dividend
- Amount per share 5.1- Amount per share (Tax exempt) 5.0
Historical Dividend Payout (sen/gross)
92%FINANCIAL YEAR
2008- Interim Dividend 16.5- Final Dividend 7.8 91%
FINANCIAL YEAR
2007- Interim Dividend 32- Final Dividend 25- Special Dividend 28 91%
% of Dividend Payout(exclude special dividend)
Bursa’s Share Price Performance
15
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
4500
Units
-30%
-20%
-10%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%Base 0% = 2 Jan 2009
Total Shareholders’ Return
o Since IPO
o YTD 30 October 2009247%60%
Share Price Performance
172%58%
o Since IPO
o YTD 30 October 2009
DAVFBM KLCI Bursa
16
Board Of Directors and Shareholdings StructureAs at 30 October 2009
13 Members
8 Independent Non-executive Directors
1 Executive Director 4 Public Interest Directors (also independent)
19%
19%
6.5% 18.1%
81.9%
Minister of Finance Inc.
Capital Market Development Fund
Newton Investment Management Limited
Foreign
Local
Market Capitalisation of Bursa Malaysia : RM4.3 bn (USD1.3 bn)
Substantial Shareholders Shareholding by Size
Additional Information
Market Foreign Ownership 27
Derivatives Market Demography 28
Derivatives Market Activity 29
Global Network 30
Liberalisation Efforts 31
Sound Macro Environment 32
Highlights of Budget 2010 33
Budget 2010 – Capital Market 34
Operating Revenue 18
Stable Revenue 19
Operating Expenses 20
Market and Product Diversity 21
Quarterly & Annual Velocity 22
Bursa’s Potential To Grow Its Velocity 23
Market Forward P/E Evaluation 24
Attractive Dividend Yields 25
Trading Participation 26
Operating Revenue
18
39%
17%
39%
5%
Trading Revenue (Securities)
Trading Revenue (Derivatives)
Stable Revenue
Other Operating Revenue*
48%
12%
37%
3%
3Q09:RM 79.1 mn
(USD 22.5 mn)
3Q08:RM 66.6 mn
(USD 20.0 mn)
RM mn 9M09 9M08 % 3Q09 3Q08 %
*Other Operating Revenue mainly comprises the haircut on interest earned from participants’ contributions & collaterals, and perusal & processing fees.
105.4
30.3
75.4
9.3
110.9
33.3
79.4
11.5
(5)
(9)
(5)
(19)
38.0
9.2
29.1
2.8
26.0
11.3
25.9
3.4
46
(19)
12
(18)
19%
• Higher securities trading revenue mainly due to improved investors’ sentiment, resulting from improving global economic statistics• Decline in derivatives trading revenue due to a drop in FKLI trades, but partially offset by higher FCPO trades.• Stable revenue increased primarily due to higher CDS fees.• Lower other operating revenue due to lower fee earned from cash margin & collaterals, and lower perusal & processing fees.
3Q09 vs. 3Q08 Commentary:
Stable Revenue
19
26%
43%
19%
10%
2%
34%
26%
24%
13%
3%
3Q09:RM 29.1 mn
(USD 8.3 mn)
3Q08:RM 25.9 mn
(USD 7.8 mn)
RM mn 9M09 9M08 % 3Q09 3Q08 %Listing Fees
Depository Services
Information Services
Broker Services*
Participants’ Fees**
22.6
24.4
18.3
8.1
2.0
28.0
20.5
18.4
10.3
2.3
(19)
19
(0.5)
(21)
(13)
7.6
12.4
5.6
2.8
0.7
8.9
6.6
6.2
3.4
0.8
(15)
88
(10)
(18)
(13)
13%
• Lower listing fees due to lower annual listing fees, impacted by lower market capitalisation.• Higher depository fees due to higher CDS fees (of which RM4.7 mn was attributed to prior periods)• Lower information services fees due to reduction in number of terminals subscribed.• Lower broker services fees due to phasing out of older network equipments at broker sites.• Lower participants’ fee due to lower admission from participants.
3Q09 vs. 3Q08 Commentary:
* Broker Services comprises of Data Comm. equipment rental income from a fixed monthly rate** Participants’ Fees comprises of application/ admission/ initial/ registration fees, participants’ subscriptions and renewal fees
• Lower total expenses mainly due to reduction in professional fees, lower market development & travel expenses and reversal of impairment on investments.
• Higher depreciation and amortisation mainly due to Bursa Trade Securities which went live in December 2008.• Higher IT maintenance due to BTS and ETP.
3Q09 vs. 3Q08 Commentary:
375
553
444
465
482
640
722
695
849
1106
870
793
736 758 798 816 865 906 963 1021 1027 987 977 957
Our Market and Product Diversity12 New Listings YTD 25 November 2009
“Others”- refers to trades conducted for accounts not belonging to individuals/ institutions. Definitions of investors’ type clarified in 2004, hence reducing the type of investor falling under “others” category.
Retail Institutions Others Local Foreign
Market Foreign Ownership
9.18%
1.22%
2.29%
0.46%
0.31%
13.30%
Singapore
UK
Hong Kong
USA
Mid-East
Others
Foreign Ownership @ 30 October 2009Ja
n-07
Oct
-07
Apr
-08
Jul-0
8
Oct
-08
Apr
-07
Jul-0
7
Jan-
08
Apr
-09
July
-09
Jan-
09
27
26.76%
73.24%
Total Shareholdings (Units) Total Market Value (RM)Foreigners
o Direct Holdings
o Foreign Nominees
4.01 4.79%10.98 16.20%14.9%TOTAL
Foreign Shareholdings by Nationality Foreign Ownership (%)
Foreign Nominees
25.0 27.5
27.0
26.6
26.5
25.7
24.1
21.7
20.9
20.7
20.7
20.9
20.9%
Oct
-09
Derivatives Market Demography
3119 14 16 16 13 15 15 19
4548 45 43 40 40 41 46 51
36
5 3 3 2 2 2 2
14 23 31 37 40 45 42 37 28
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 YTDOct 09
% FKLI
40 38 35 33 35 31 25 27 35
15 21 26 24 23 27 34 38 27
27 21 18 20 22 25 22 14 16
14 14 17 20 18 16 18 20 22
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 YTDOct 09
% FCPO
28
2 Leading Derivatives Products, FKLI & FCPO
34%
63%
3%
9M09
3-Month KL Interbank Offered Rate Futures (FKB3)
KL Composite Index Futures (FKLI)
Crude Palm Oil Futures (FCPO)
48%49%
3%
9M08
* Local - A local participant is an individual who has been admitted as a participant inaccordance with The Rules, registered with SC and has the right to trade for himself -all futures contracts listed on the Derivatives Exchange.
Quarterly (Daily Average Contracts) Annually (Total, million units)
KLCI Futures
Crude Palm Oil Futures Open Position
Others KLCI Futures
Crude Palm Oil Futures Open Position
Others
Multi Commodity Exchange of India Limited Development of commodities market and for cross listing of products
Dalian Commodities Exchange Joint organizing of “China International Oil and Oilseeds Conference”.
Australian Securities Exchange Facilitating communication channels and fostering relations
Singapore Exchange Derivatives Trading Limited Exploring future business relationship opportunities
NYSE EuronextTechnology Solutions Provider for equities & DMA platform: Through NYX Advanced Trading Solutions
Global Network
Korea Exchange Development of Financial Market Trading Platform for the bond market in Bursa Malaysia
The Agricultural Futures Exchange of Thailand Development of commodities and futures markets
Ho Chi Minh City & Hanoi Securities Trading Centre Facilitating communication channels and fostering relations
Tokyo Stock Exchange Providing mutual cooperation on personnel training & information exchange
PT. Bursa Berjangka Jakarta Development of futures and commodities markets
Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Sharing market surveillance information
30
Chicago Mercantile ExchangeStrategic collaboration with CME on FCPO licensing, Globex services arrangement & equity participation
Central Depository Services (India) Ltd Establish cooperative relationship
Opening Our MarketCapital Market Liberalisation Announcements via Invest Malaysia
31
CALENDER YEAR
2009Deregulation of FIC Guidelines
• Guideline covering acquisition of equity stakes, mergers and takeovers removed• 30% Bumi equity for new IPOs dropped
Fund Management and Stockbroking Liberalisation
• Foreign shareholding for unit trust management companies raised to 70%, 100% for wholesale segment
• Foreign shareholding for stockbroking companies raised to 70%
Establishment of EKUINAS• A private equity fund to invest in sectors with high growth potential
GLCs to Focus on Core Activities• GLCs to dispose non core activities to give way for entrepreneurs and compete on a level playing
field with private sector
2008 • Streamlining of Bursa’s Main, Secondary and MESDAQ board• Market making framework• Liberalisation of bond market approval framework
2007 • Abolishment of real property gains tax• Divestment of government stakes in GLCs via ETFs• 1st incentive package for Iskandar Malaysia
2006• Khazanah driving GLC business transformation plan• Re-introduction of regulated shortselling & securities borrowing and lending• Liberalisation of foreign and dual listing• Consolidation of securities and futures law
2005 • New license for 5 foreign brokers and 1 foreign fund management license
Sound Macro Environment
• > 90% of assets are RM denominated
• Non-performing loan ratio at 2.2%
• >US$ 96.0 billion @ 15 October 2009
• Projected between 3% to 4%
• Overnight policy rate: 2.0%
• 2009 Consensus at 0.9%
• 2009F at US$ 25.3 billion, highest after China
Strong Banking Sector & Ample Liquidity
Healthy Foreign Reserves
2010 GDP Growth
Conductive Domestic Interest Rates
Manageable Inflation
Strong Current Account in the Region
32
Highlights of Budget 2010
33
Government to reduce role in economic activities : Initiating the 2nd Wave of Privatisation Finalising the implementation of GST Restructuring of fuel subsidy Intensifying FDI: Easing on procedures and conditions on equity ownership in local projects
MACROECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS
Leveraging on niche areas: Tourism, ICT, Finance & Islamic Banking, Halal, Green Tech. Industries and Creative Industries
Attracting talented and skilled individuals from abroad: Simplifying the granting of PR Quality of Education: Providing more autonomy to Public Higher Education Institutions Intensifying R&D and Commercialisation activities: e.g. Rationalising all research funds and grants Expedite implementation of High Speed Broadband
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENES
Improving the structure of budget allocation by adopting Outcome Based Budgeting (OBB) Simplifying access to SME financing by consolidating the various funds under a single agency Combating corruption: Implementing the Whistle Blower Act Providing incentives to Government agencies to generate revenue: Monetisation of govt. assets
INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
34
Budget 2010 – Capital MarketIncreasing the Competitiveness of Malaysian Capital Market
Liberalisation of commission-sharing arrangements between stockbrokers and remisiers Motivate remisiers to galvinise interest in the stock market from retail investors Attract more remisiers to enter the market
Allowance of 100% foreign equity participation in corporate finance companies Diversify the level of offerings and talent in the Malaysian market Spur more corporate action in the market
Requirement for PLC’s to offer e-Dividend Reduce time and offer convenience to shareholders Issuers to benefit from ease of implementation
Tax incentives to develop Islamic Capital Market: Various tax & stamp duty exemptions on Islamic Financial Instruments