Advertisement
Malaysia
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Malaysia investigates state pension’s failed eFishery investment

The agritech start-up collapsed over a US$300 million fraud, with its jailed CEO revealing that he had falsified the company’s accounts

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Gibran Huzaifah, founder of eFishery, was jailed nine years in Indonesia in April. Photo: Handout
Bloomberg
Malaysia’s anti-corruption agency has opened an investigation into losses tied to state pension fund Kumpulan Wang Persaraan Diperbadankan’s investment in failed Indonesian agritech start-up eFishery.

A team was formed on Friday to “study and examine the issue thoroughly,” Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Chief Commissioner Abdul Halim Aman said in a statement on Saturday.

“The investigation will be conducted fairly, transparently and impartially based on existing legal provisions,” Abdul Halim said. “The public is requested not to speculate on this investigation to avoid confusion and maintain the integrity of the investigation process.”

The probe is the latest development in the roughly US$300 million fraud that brought down one of Southeast Asia’s most celebrated start-ups. Indonesia sentenced eFishery founder Gibran Huzaifah to nine years in prison in April, about a year after he gave Bloomberg News a detailed account of how he falsified the company’s accounts at a start-up once valued north of US$1 billion.

KWAP, as the pension fund is known, invested about 163.4 million ringgit (US$40 million) in eFishery, it said in a statement on Saturday. That represented about 2.51 per cent of eFishery’s shareholding, it said.

“KWAP was a minority shareholder, while the majority of the company’s shares were held by other investors, including major global institutional investors that were similarly affected by the misconduct,” the pension fund said. “KWAP is also continuing to pursue all available avenues to maximise the recovery of its investment.”

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x