Malaysia, MTB 0% 23nov2018, MYR (91D) (FIGI BBG00LS9ZLG1, TC180006, MYBTC1800063)
国内債券, Zero-coupon bonds
国内債券, Zero-coupon bonds
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Malaysia is a country in Southeast Asia with a diversified and export-oriented economy. The largest sector of the country's economy is services, supported by manufacturing, commodities, Islamic finance, trade, and infrastructure. The national currency is the ...
Malaysia is a country in Southeast Asia with a diversified and export-oriented economy. The largest sector of the country's economy is services, supported by manufacturing, commodities, Islamic finance, trade, and infrastructure. The national currency is the Malaysian ringgit (MYR), and the country's financial system is regulated by Bank Negara Malaysia and the Securities Commission Malaysia.
The Malaysia bonds market is one of the most developed and dynamic debt markets in ASEAN. It is represented by government securities, private debt securities, sukuk, and asset-backed securities. A key feature of the market is the strong role of Islamic finance, as Malaysia remains one of the world's leading sukuk centers. Bond and sukuk prices, market data, and transaction information are available through the Bond+Sukuk Information Exchange (BIX), while most institutional trading takes place over the counter. The Malaysia government bond market is represented by conventional and Islamic instruments issued mainly through Bank Negara Malaysia on behalf of the government. Main securities include Malaysian Treasury Bills (MTB), Malaysian Government Securities (MGS), Government Investment Issues (GII), and Malaysian Islamic Treasury Bills (MITB). Malaysian government bonds are used to finance public expenditure, manage liquidity, and provide benchmark yields for the domestic debt market. The private sector is represented by short- and long-term debt securities issued by banks, financial institutions, infrastructure companies, utilities, real estate developers, and large corporations. Malaysian bonds may be issued on either a conventional or Islamic basis, depending on issuer needs and investor demand. Sukuk instruments are especially important for financing infrastructure, energy, property, and government-linked projects. For international investors, Malaysia bonds offer exposure to a deep local-currency market with strong Islamic finance infrastructure, regular sovereign issuance, and active corporate participation. The market remains sensitive to interest rates, inflation, ringgit movements, fiscal policy, and regional capital flows, but it continues to play an important role in Southeast Asia's fixed-income landscape. |
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1 000 000
債券
80 234
株
175 910
ETF&投資信託
70 000
インデックス
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