Chapter financial System of Malaysia Financial System Structure in Malaysia
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Financial System of Malaysia 5 1 Financi
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- Licensed institutions
- Non-scheduled institutions
5.5 Financial Regulation Among the main regulations and guidelines issued by the authorities to govern the financial system in Malaysia are:- 5.5.1 Banking and Financial Institutions Act, 1989 (BAFIA) The Banking and Financial Institutions Act, 1989 (BAFIA) was passed in Parliament and came into force on October 1, 1989. The BAFIA has effectively replaced the Banking Act 1973 and the Finance Companies Act 1969. The Islamic Banking Act 1983, however, is not affected. The BAFIA is a comprehensive act and extends comprehensive powers to Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) to supervise a larger spectrum of financial institutions, with the direct responsibilities to regulate and supervise all licensed institutions (commercial banks, finance companies, merchant banks, discount houses and money brokers) and also regulate scheduled and non-scheduled institutions. BAFIA 1989 is divided into 16 parts and covers a wide spectrum of subject matters related to the banking industry in Malaysia. The Act provides a framework that enables BNM to supervise and regulate three broad groups of financial institutions: • Licensed institutions comprising the commercial banks, merchant banks, finance companies, discount houses, money brokers and foreign exchange brokers; • Scheduled institutions comprising non-bank sources of credit and finance, which include issuers of charge/credit cards and travellers’ cheques, operations of cash dispensing machines, development finance institutions, building societies and housing credit institutions, factoring companies and leasing companies. Also included under this group are representative offices of foreign banks or foreign institutions which carry out the business or activities similar to the scheduled institutions; and • Non-scheduled institutions comprising all other statutory bodies and institutions involved in the provision of finance and credit. The Act also provides BNM the regulatory power to regulate the following: • Control of establishment or acquisition of subsidiaries or opening of offices in Malaysia by a local or foreign licensed institutions • Maintenance of reserve fund, capital, net working funds, liquid assets by the financial institutions • Appointment of auditors, submission of financial statement, exhibition of financial statements, submission of statistics to BNM. 5.5.2 Insurance Act 1996 Under the Insurance Act 1996, BNM retains a substantial degree of regulatory control over the management, control of licensees and the critical aspects of their operations. Among the areas subject to BNM’s approval under the Insurance Act 1996 are: • The appointment of directors and chief executive officers; • The acquisition or disposal of substantial interests in shares of a licensee; • The establishment of offices and subsidiaries; • Appointment of auditors and actuaries; and • Outsourcing of core insurance activities. The Insurance Act 1996 which became effective on 1 January 1997, has incorporated amendments made to the Insurance Act 1963. It incorporated changes needed to address deficiencies in the previous legislation. The subsidiary legislation, the Insurance Regulations 1996 (Regulations) saw several changes in 1999 in respect of minimum capital requirement as follows:- • The minimum paid-up capital prescribed for a licensed local insurer underwriting direct insurance business, or surplus of assets over liabilities in the case of a licensed foreign insurer is set at RM50 million from 31 December 2000; and • The absolute minimum margin of solvency (before taking into account insurance fund liabilities) for each class of insurance business of direct and local professional reinsurers is set at RM50 million from 1 January 2001.” 5.5.3 Anti-Money Laundering Act 2001 The Anti-Money Laundering Act 2001 (AMLA) was gazetted on 5 July 2001. AMLA provides comprehensive new laws for the prevention, detection and prosecution of money laundering, the forfeiture of property derived from, or involvement in money laundering and the requirements for record keeping and reporting of suspicious transactions for reporting institutions. AMLA addresses the following broad issues:- • Money laundering offences • Financial Intelligence Unit • Reporting obligations • Powers of investigation, search and seizure • Powers of freezing, seizure and forfeiture of property |
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