CGS International
July 3, 2025
Malaysia’s Market Recovery: Tariffs, Rate Cuts, and Reforms Set the Stage for a KLCI Rebound in 2025
Executive Summary: From Market Rout to Renewed Optimism
Malaysia’s equity market has weathered a stormy first half of 2025, battered by external shocks such as US tariff escalations and volatile global risk sentiment. Yet, CGS International anticipates a strong comeback in the second half of the year, underpinned by several tailwinds: easing tariff tensions, a likely resumption in the US Federal Reserve’s rate cut cycle, and a structural strengthening of Malaysia’s domestic economy. With foreign shareholding at record lows and compelling market valuations, the outlook for the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (KLCI) is cautiously optimistic, with a year-end target of 1,670.
1H25 Market Review: External Headwinds Dominate
- The KLCI declined 6.7% in the first half of 2025, but this was cushioned by the ringgit’s 6.2% appreciation, resulting in a currency-adjusted return of just -0.9%.
- Malaysia’s performance lagged the MSCI AC ASEAN Index, which gained 3.4% over the same period—mainly led by Singapore’s STI (+12.4%).
- Market volatility was largely driven by external factors: US policy shifts on AI and tariffs, Trump’s inauguration, and a global tariff hike—Malaysia was hit with a 24% rate, comparatively lower than the ASEAN average of 33% and below key Asian peers’ 28% average.
- Despite a sharp drop to a YTD low of 1,401 points in April, the KLCI rebounded strongly (+13.1% by mid-May) as global tariff tensions eased and the US rescinded a controversial AI rule.
- Profit-taking ensued on renewed geopolitical risks, but the KLCI still eked out a 1.3% gain in 2Q25.
Tariff Tensions: Short-Term Pain, Medium-Term Relief
- Malaysia’s exposure to the US and China is significant in trade terms (13.2% and 12.4% of exports in 2024, respectively), but less so for listed equities—estimated revenue exposure for the KLCI is just 0.5% (US) and 4.9% (China).
- Sectors with higher US revenue exposure: Gloves, Technology, EMS, and Gaming. For China: Ports, Automotive, Technology, and Petrochemicals.
- Past US tariff cycles under Trump suggest escalation may be a negotiating tactic, with eventual de-escalation and trade deals likely. Early signs in 2025 indicate a faster shift toward resolution, with Malaysia poised to reach a mutually beneficial agreement with the US before the July deadline.
Monetary Policy Tailwinds: Rate Cuts and Ringgit Strength
- The Fed’s real federal funds rate (FFR-CPI) remains well above long-term averages, signaling room for further FFR reductions beyond the expected 50bp cut in 2H25. Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) is projected to make a milder 25bp OPR cut.
- Narrowing FFR-OPR spreads historically correlate inversely with the KLCI: as US-Malaysia rate differentials shrink, the ringgit strengthens and local equities rally.
- Episodes of narrowing spreads since 2005 have seen the ringgit appreciate, most notably with a +13.3% gain from Mar 2010 to May 2011. The ringgit’s appreciation is positive for domestic demand-driven sectors, while exporters (Gloves, Tech, Petrochemicals) could face margin pressure.
Malaysia’s Economic Reform Agenda: Fiscal Discipline and Investment Momentum
- Despite external challenges, the Unity Government (UG) has pressed ahead with meaningful reforms: two rounds of sales and service tax (SST) revisions, ongoing subsidy rationalization (with RON95 fuel next in line), and strategic policy blueprints under the Madani Economy.
- Gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) grew at an average of 11.6% year-on-year from 1Q24 to 1Q25, driven by record-high approved investments (RM379bn in 2024; +15% yoy).
- Malaysia’s political landscape is more stable, with PM Anwar’s government outlasting previous administrations and approval ratings rising.
SST3.0 and Subsidy Rationalisation: Sector Impact and Fiscal Outlook
- SST3.0, implemented in July 2025, broadens the tax base, raising the sales tax on many discretionary and non-essential items and expanding the service tax scope. Estimated to add RM10bn to annual revenues, with a minor 10-20bp bump to inflation.
- Sector implications:
- Banking: Retail-focused banks (Public Bank, Hong Leong Bank) less impacted; Bank Islam could benefit as Islamic finance is exempt.
- Healthcare: 6% service tax on non-citizen private healthcare; limited impact due to low foreign patient mix.
- Construction & Property: 6% service tax on construction (excluding residential); 8% service tax on rental for non-residential property may pressure weaker REITs.
- RON95 subsidy rationalisation could save RM8bn per year, targeting the highest income brackets and foreigners. Diesel subsidy removal in 2024 already contributed to a 13.5% drop in subsidy spending; total subsidies projected to fall by 22% in 2025.
- MOF projects Malaysia’s fiscal deficit to narrow to -3.8% of GDP in 2025, aided by SST3.0 and potential RON95 subsidy savings.
Comparisons to Past Reform Cycles: The Najib Parallel
- Malaysia’s current reform trajectory mirrors the post-GFC period under Najib, which saw subsidy rationalisation, new consumption taxes, and direct cash handouts. The KLCI returned 97% during Najib’s tenure, with the forward P/E rating rising significantly.
- The current government enjoys a stronger parliamentary majority, making reform implementation smoother.
Valuation and Technical Indicators: The Case for a KLCI Rebound
- Despite the recent recovery, the KLCI trades at 14.1x P/E (-0.9 s.d. below the 5-year mean), 1.44x P/BV (-0.2 s.d.), and at a 6.6% discount to the regional peer group (ASEAN-5).
- The “Buffett indicator” (market cap to nominal GDP ratio) remains near trough levels, a signal that has historically marked market bottoms and subsequent rebounds of 6% to 29% within 1-3 months.
- Foreign shareholding on Bursa is at a record low of 19%, significantly below the post-GFC peak of 25%. A return to “market-weight” could bring +RM24.8bn in potential foreign inflows—over twice the size of the largest annual net inflow of the past decade.
- Domestic institutional investors, led by EPF, are being encouraged to increase local allocations, with EPF targeting a 70% domestic investment level.
KLCI Earnings Outlook and Sector Contribution
- KLCI earnings growth is forecast at +5.4% in 2025 (down from an earlier 9.0%), led by:
- Financials: +3 percentage points, with 6.2% net interest income growth expected.
- Agribusiness: +1.4 percentage points (KLK’s low base recovery).
- Utilities: +0.9 percentage points (Tenaga’s Majung 4 plant restart).
- Telecommunications projected to drag due to Axiata’s deconsolidation of XL and a stronger ringgit.
- 2026 KLCI earnings growth seen picking up to +7.3%.
Sector |
Contribution to KLCI 2025F Earnings Growth (p.p.) |
Contribution to KLCI 2026F Earnings Growth (p.p.) |
Agribusiness |
+1.4 |
+0.1 |
Financials |
+3.0 |
+2.1 |
Construction & Property |
+0.3 |
+0.2 |
Consumer |
+0.6 |
+0.9 |
Oil & Gas |
+0.5 |
+0.1 |
Others |
+0.3 |
+0.1 |
Telecommunications |
-1.6 |
+0.5 |
Utilities |
+0.9 |
+3.3 |
KLCI Total |
+5.4 |
+7.3 |
Sector Ratings and Investment Strategy
- Overweight: Banking, Construction, Consumer Discretionary, Healthcare, Oil & Gas, REITs, Transport, Utilities
- Neutral: Agribusiness, Automotive, Consumer Staples, Real Estate, Technology, Telecommunications
- Underweight: Gloves, Petrochemicals
High Conviction Stock Picks: Detailed Analysis
Company |
Rating |
TP (RM) |
Price (RM) |
2025 P/E |
2025E Dividend Yield |
Investment Case |
Tenaga Nasional |
ADD |
19.10 |
14.90 |
18.4x |
3.5% |
Regulatory clarity from new tariff schedule; high capex under RP4 to drive recurring income; strong buffer against volatility. |
CIMB Group Holdings |
ADD |
9.10 |
6.75 |
8.6x |
5.2% |
Loan growth, potential for higher dividends, ROE expansion targets. |
Hong Leong Bank |
ADD |
30.70 |
19.48 |
8.7x |
4.1% |
Above-industry loan growth, lowest sector credit risk, strategic plan for ROE >12.5%. |
SD Guthrie |
ADD |
5.85 |
4.70 |
19.0x |
2.6% |
Asset monetisation via industrial park developments; potential for higher dividend payout. |
Gamuda |
ADD |
6.00 |
4.97 |
23.7x |
1.1% |
Diversified geographical exposure; likely to exceed RM40-45bn orderbook target; pipeline in Australia, Taiwan, and Malaysia. |
Telekom Malaysia |
ADD |
8.70 |
6.61 |
13.5x |
4.3% |
Strong cash flows, underleveraged balance sheet, new undersea cable and data centre capacity, robust ROEs. |
Axiata Group |
ADD |
3.37 |
2.34 |
37.9x |
4.2% |
Asset value illumination; narrowing 45% discount to RNAV; balance sheet benefits from stronger ringgit. |
MR D.I.Y. Group (M) |
ADD |
2.09 |
1.67 |
25.0x |
3.0% |
Revenue and earnings growth from consumption, store rollouts; attractive P/E vs. global peers. |
Fraser & Neave Holdings |
ADD |
36.50 |
29.08 |
18.3x |
3.0% |
Dairy farm business as new growth catalyst; compelling valuation vs. larger cap consumer staples. |
Dialog Group |
ADD |
2.58 |
1.63 |
19.1x |
1.8% |
Expanding upstream and tank terminal business; significant capacity expansion potential. |
Malayan Cement |
ADD |
7.10 |
5.09 |
10.4x |
2.3% |
Dominant cement market position; robust demand from data centres and infrastructure builds. |
Duopharma Biotech |
ADD |
1.55 |
1.38 |
15.2x |
2.5% |
40% earnings growth expected from APPL contracts, stronger RM, and lower input prices. |
Mynews Holdings |
ADD |
0.75 |
0.55 |
24.7x |
1.5% |
Profit recovery to drive multiple expansion; 54% net profit CAGR forecast for FY25-27. |
Optimax Holdings |
ADD |
0.81 |
0.51 |
16.0x |
4.3% |
Record profits forecast for FY25 as three new ACCs begin contributing; 12% FY24-27 EPS CAGR. |
Conclusion: KLCI Set for a Second-Half Rebound
The Malaysian equity market stands at a turning point. With external shocks abating, monetary tailwinds gathering, and domestic reforms taking hold, CGS International expects a volatile but ultimately positive second half for 2025. The KLCI is forecast to reach 1,670 by year-end, representing attractive upside amid rock-bottom foreign shareholding and compelling valuations. Investors are encouraged to focus on sectors and stocks with robust domestic demand, fiscal resilience, and exposure to reform-driven growth.