Deep-pocketed institutional investors are shifting their focus to long-term topics based on artificial intelligence – AI, supply chain restructuring, and the global energy transition, and ASEAN is being recast as a fundamentally attractive global investment choice.
The trend was further underlined at the Invest ASEAN forum in Singapore, organized by Maybank Investment Banking Group, which brought together some 200 institutional investors as well as prime broking clients that had US$23 trillion or RM93 trillion in combined assets under management.
The event additionally included 54 companies from ASEAN-6 along with India with a total market value of US$553 billion throughout the banking, technology, healthcare, consumer, and manufacturing as well as renewable energy sectors, demonstrating wide-ranging investor engagement in the region’s structural growth drivers.
The strong engagement is testimony to the transformation of ASEAN from a cyclical developing market narrative to a global investment choice and a multiyear allocation location where global capital is increasingly being invested through themes such as AI-driven digital transformation and production-relocating methods, as well as clean energy implementation.
The investor engagement is indeed robust, with continued interest indicating confidence in the resilience of ASEAN during mid-global uncertainties, especially with regard to energy transition, supply chain restructuring, and AI-driven transformational trends, opines the CEO of Maybank Investment Banking Group. Michael Oh-Lau.
When it comes to the macroeconomic front, Maybank boosted its 2024 GDP growth forecast for ASEAN-6 to 4.7% from 4.4% and the 2026 growth projection for Malaysia to 4.9% from 4.4%, pointing to sturdy manufacturing output, more robust net exports, and ongoing investment momentum.
One can anticipate Malaysia to benefit from the worldwide AI upcycle, the country’s position as a net energy supplier, and substantial flows into technology, renewable energy, and industrial real estate along with infrastructure projects. Maybank also went on to lift its year-end FBM KLCI target to 1,750, backed up by projected earnings growth of 7.5%, steady foreign fund participation, and continued momentum in the investment cycle. The planned growth of the KLCI to 50 constituents will additionally broaden market participation and deepen sector representation.
The bank also became more constructive on the technology sector as it highlighted long-term upside from AI and data center expansion, which is expected to enhance Malaysia’s positioning within the region’s evolving digital as well as industrial ecosystem.
In general, the Invest ASEAN platform is close to a clear inflection point. Global capital is fundamentally re-rating ASEAN, via Malaysia being a major recipient of AI-driven supply chain reorganization and energy shift-driven investment activity.































