The recent uproar over the presence of Blackrock as shareholder in GIP, one of the consortium partner making a general offer to turn Malaysia Airport Holding Berhad (MAHB) private had diverted public attention from the more pertinent issues surrounding the corporate exercise.
Though the instigation by PPBM Youth leader Wan Fayshal is understandably due to Blackrock CEO denouncement of the October 7th 2023 Hamas attack on Israel but went silent to genocidal response by Israel, it diverted attention from the more pertinent questions.
Why turn MAHB private? What added benefit of bringing in ADIA and GIP into the privatisation consortium? Was Blackrock investment in GIP from its non-discretionary account and acting as client's proxy? Is there a beneficiary?
Putting the politics aside for a while, the appearance of the world's largest Fund Manager in the USD3.9 billion exercise created excitement in the local financial market.
After languishing from three attempts to surpass 4.80, the US-MYR plunged from 4.75 level to strengthen ringgit as high as 4.68 within a short period in the third week of May. Market sources claimed it sparked some RM500 million of foreign fund pouring into the local stock market daily.
As an index-linked Fund Manager, it is only expected of Blackrock to already have exposure in a portfolio of key Malaysian shares. Apparently, they have direct investment in utilities and mining company in Kelantan, the state where Wan Fayshal's constituency lies.
If there is legitimate reasons and nothing terribly suspicious, the communication by Khazanah or ultimately the Ministry of Finance should have been more transparent. Yes, seeking answer from Ministry of Transport is the wrong address.
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