Our Expert in Malaysia
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Cross-border M&A in Malaysia has entered a more complex regulatory phase in 2026, driven by stricter enforcement from the Malaysia Competition Commission (MyCC) and tighter government scrutiny of foreign‑investment flows into sensitive sectors. Deal teams that once treated Malaysian merger control as a secondary workstream now face real timing risk: a missed notification or an overlooked sectoral approval can delay, or unwind, a transaction weeks after commercial terms are agreed. This guide sets out the merger‑control rules, maps the sectoral approval landscape, and provides a practical pre‑deal checklist designed for in‑house counsel, private‑equity teams, and corporate development professionals planning acquisitions into Malaysia.
30‑second decision takeaway:
This article is general guidance only. It does not constitute legal advice. Parties contemplating a transaction should obtain advice tailored to their specific circumstances.
Before signing a share‑purchase agreement or asset‑purchase agreement for a Malaysian target, every buyer should work through the following six‑point checklist. Industry observers expect that deal teams who address these items during the letter‑of‑intent stage, rather than post‑signing, save an average of four to six weeks on the overall transaction timetable.
Malaysia’s merger‑control regime sits within Part IV of the Competition Act 2010, administered by the MyCC. Understanding when notification is triggered is the single most important regulatory step in any cross-border M&A in Malaysia transaction.
The Competition Act 2010 defines a “merger” broadly. It covers acquisitions of shares or assets, as well as the formation of joint ventures that result in a change of control or the ability to materially influence the policy of another enterprise. The Act applies to any merger that has, or is likely to have, the effect of substantially lessening competition in any market for goods or services in Malaysia. Critically, the obligation extends to foreign‑to‑foreign transactions where the competitive effects are felt within Malaysian markets.
The MyCC assesses mergers on a voluntary notification basis in most sectors, but under sector‑specific legislation, particularly in aviation and communications, notification may be mandatory. Deal teams should therefore treat every threshold‑exceeding transaction as a de facto mandatory filing, because completing a merger that substantially lessens competition without clearance exposes the parties to investigation, penalties, and potential unwinding orders.
The MyCC applies turnover and asset‑based thresholds to determine whether a merger warrants review. Malaysia does not currently use a standalone deal‑value threshold of the kind recently adopted in India’s CCI merger‑control reforms. Instead, the focus remains on the combined and individual turnover and assets of the merging parties within Malaysia.
| Threshold Type | Practical Trigger | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Turnover/asset threshold (combined parties) | Combined annual turnover in Malaysia or combined assets in Malaysia exceed the prescribed level set by MyCC guidelines | Foreign PE fund acquires 100% of a Malaysian logistics company with RM 500 million annual turnover, combined threshold likely met |
| Individual turnover/asset threshold (target or acquirer) | At least two of the merging parties each have turnover or assets in Malaysia above individual prescribed thresholds | Multinational buyer with existing Malaysian operations and target both exceeding individual thresholds |
| Market‑share assessment (supplementary) | Where parties operate in the same or vertically related market and the merged entity would hold a significant market share, MyCC may initiate review even near threshold boundaries | Telecoms sector acquisition creating a combined market share above 40% |
Because Malaysia relies on turnover and assets rather than pure deal value, acquisitions of high‑growth start‑ups with low revenue but high strategic value may fall below notification thresholds. Early indications suggest the MyCC is aware of this gap and industry observers expect ongoing policy discussion about supplementary thresholds in future reform cycles.
The MyCC operates a multi‑phase review process. Timelines are indicative and can vary depending on the complexity of the transaction and the completeness of the notification:
The practical effect is that buyers should plan for a minimum 4–8 week merger filing timeline for a Phase 1 clearance, and 4–6 months if Phase 2 is triggered. Building this range into the contractual long‑stop date is essential.
Merger control under the MyCC is only one layer of the regulatory framework. Foreign investment approval in Malaysia depends heavily on the target’s sector. Multiple agencies administer overlapping approval requirements, and failure to identify the correct authority at the outset is one of the most common causes of delay in Malaysia cross-border M&A transactions.
| Sector | Key Approval(s) Required | Typical Timeline (Guidance) |
|---|---|---|
| Banking and financial services | BNM prior approval; Securities Commission for capital‑market intermediaries | 3–6 months |
| Manufacturing and investment incentives | MIDA approval; MITI manufacturing licence (if applicable) | 4–8 weeks (fast‑track available) |
| Telecommunications and media | MCMC clearance; national security screening | 8–16 weeks |
| Energy and petroleum | Energy Commission; Petronas consent (upstream) | 8–16 weeks |
| Real estate (land) | State authority consent for foreign land ownership | 6–12 weeks |
| Defence and national security | Ministry of Defence; National Security Council screening | Variable, typically 3–6 months |
The critical takeaway for deal teams is that these sectoral approvals run in addition to, not instead of, MyCC merger‑control assessment. A transaction in the banking sector, for example, requires both BNM approval and a MyCC filing if the turnover and asset thresholds are met. Running both approval streams in parallel is essential to preserving the deal timetable. Employment‑related due diligence in regulated sectors should also account for Malaysian retrenchment rules that may apply post‑completion if workforce restructuring is anticipated.
Deal architecture choices made at the term‑sheet stage have a direct impact on the number and complexity of regulatory approvals. Structuring M&A in Malaysia with an eye on the approval landscape can shave weeks off the timetable.
| Structuring Choice | Regulatory Consequence | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Local holdco acquisition | May reduce immediate asset‑transfer approvals but still triggers MyCC if thresholds met | Cross‑border buyer seeking operational continuity |
| Asset purchase | May avoid shareholder‑level approvals but triggers land/asset transfer and licence re‑issuance | When target assets are not in sensitive sectors |
| Share acquisition | Triggers takeover code (public targets) and MyCC; simpler for employment and licence continuity | Typical cross‑border PE buyouts |
Contractual protections are equally important. Conditions precedent referencing specific regulatory clearances, MyCC, BNM, MCMC, or state land, should be drafted with precision, specifying which clearance is required and the consequences of refusal or delay. Reverse break fees compensating the seller if the buyer fails to obtain regulatory clearance provide deal certainty for the target while placing the regulatory‑risk cost where it belongs. Disclosure letters play a particularly important role in Malaysian M&A, capturing the target’s existing regulatory interactions, prior MyCC correspondence, and any outstanding compliance issues that could complicate the buyer’s filing.
Pre-deal due diligence in Malaysia should begin before the signing of any binding commitment. The scope extends beyond conventional financial and legal diligence to include specific competition and regulatory layers.
This checklist can be adapted and issued as a formal document‑request list to the target’s management as part of the data‑room setup process.
The MyCC notification is submitted using the prescribed notification form, accompanied by supporting documents including market‑share data, competitive analysis, details of the transaction structure, and copies of the sale agreement (or drafts). Parties should mark confidential commercial information clearly and, where privileged legal advice is included, ensure that privilege claims are identified on a schedule. Engaging Malaysian competition counsel early in the process, ideally at the term‑sheet stage, allows the notification to be prepared in parallel with commercial negotiation.
The table below illustrates the three parallel regulatory tracks that buyers should manage concurrently. Industry observers expect that deals falling into multiple regulated sectors will face the longest timetables and should set contractual long‑stop dates at the outer boundary of the slowest approval stream.
| Process | Typical Duration | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|
| MyCC pre‑notification + Phase 1 review | 4–8 weeks | Pre‑notify early; provide clearing evidence (market‑share data, no‑overlap analysis) at the outset |
| MyCC Phase 2 review (if triggered) | Additional 8–16 weeks | Offer undertakings proactively to narrow the scope of Phase 2 review |
| Sectoral approvals (e.g., BNM) | 8–16 weeks | Engage the regulator before signing; consider interim undertakings to permit limited pre‑completion steps |
| Land/state approvals | 6–12 weeks | Start state‑level applications as early as possible, these cannot be expedited once in the queue |
| Recommended contractual long‑stop date | 4–6 months from signing | Build in a 30‑day extension mechanism triggered by regulatory delays outside the parties’ control |
The nature and scope of filing obligations differ depending on whether the buyer is acquiring shares in a domestic target, purchasing assets, or is a foreign entity. The following comparison table summarises the key distinctions.
| Entity Type | Merger Filing Obligation (MyCC) | Other Notifications / Approvals |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic company (local target) | Apply threshold tests, may require MyCC filing if turnover/asset thresholds exceeded | Sectoral approvals as applicable (MIDA, state land, sector regulator) |
| Foreign buyer acquiring local shares | Filing obligation if thresholds met; takeover code applies if target is a public company | FDI screening; BNM approval (if acquiring a financial institution); MCMC (telecoms) |
| Asset purchase (target assets only) | Filing depends on whether change of control arises and thresholds are met | Land transfer approvals; licence transfer or re‑application; MIDA (if incentive conditions attached) |
Cross-border M&A in Malaysia in 2026 demands rigorous pre‑deal planning across multiple regulatory fronts. The interplay between MyCC merger control, sectoral foreign‑investment approvals, and, for public targets, the Securities Commission’s takeover code creates a layered compliance landscape that rewards early engagement and penalises delay. Deal teams that identify the applicable thresholds, map every required approval, and build realistic timing buffers into the transaction documents will secure a meaningful advantage in execution speed and deal certainty.
For further guidance on Malaysian M&A matters, find an M&A lawyer in Malaysia through our directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Terrence Chong at Darryl Edward & Co., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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