Singapore, Malaysia resolve 20-year land, water disputes

Singapore and Malaysia said on Monday they have resolved long-standing disputes over land and water that have plagued ties between the two neighbours for the past 20 years.

Malaysia will relocate its railway station near Singapore’s central business district to an area close to one of the two bridges linking the two countries, freeing up land in the city-state for redevelopment.

Malaysia has sovereignty over the site on which the Tanjong Pagar station is located, as well as land on both sides of the railway tracks that run through Singapore, under agreements dating back to British colonial rule.

Singapore said in turn it would not seek to extend a water agreement dating back to 1961, which allowed the city-state to buy water from the southern Malaysian state of Johor at below-market rates.

Singapore will also hand over the waterworks it operates in Johor to the Malaysian state government when the current agreement lapses.

The agreement between the two countries emerged after a meeting between Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

“It’s a big breakthrough. It paves the way for closer ties now that long-standing sore points have finally been resolved,” said Citigroup economist Kit Wei Zheng.

The two countries said the Malayan Railway land will be developed by a joint venture between Malaysian sovereign wealth fund Khazanah, which will hold 60 percent, and Singapore state investor Temasek, which will own the balance 40 percent.

Other agreements reached by the two countries include the building of a rapid transit link between Singapore and southern Malaysia, and the joint development of an “iconic project” in Malaysia’s Iskandar region by the two countries.

Malaysia has been promoting the Iskandar region, a showcase economic zone just north of Singapore, that it hopes can become a hinterland for its wealthy neighbour just as China’s booming Shenzhen complements neighbouring Hong Kong. The zone has, however, attracted relatively few investments from Singapore.

“The points of agreement would facilitate resolution of the issue which has been outstanding for more than 19 years,” the two countries said in a joint statement.

(Reporting by Kevin Lim; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Temasek pays US$600m for stake in China bank

SINGAPORE (AFP) – Singapore’s state-linked investment firm Temasek Holdings has paid 600 million US dollars to raise its stake in China Construction Bank (CCB), a report said Thursday.

The move will take Temasek’s investment in the Chinese bank to 6.5 percent, or 14.3 billion shares, from 6.0 percent, the Straits Times said, quoting unnamed sources.

Temasek declined to confirm the report, saying it “is inappropriate for us to comment on unsourced reports.”

Bank of America said last week it had sold a third of its stake in CCB for 7.3 billion dollars to a consortium that includes Temasek Holdings, China’s Hopu Investment Management and China Life Insurance.

The US bank said it sold the shares to raise capital.

Temasek’s increased holding in the Chinese bank came as it tries to rebalance its worldwide portfolio after taking a hit from the global economic downturn.

The firm, along with the Government of Singapore Investment Corp, are the city-state’s two main state investment vehicles.

They sunk billions of dollars into Western banks shaken by the US-born financial crisis and have since seen the value of the investments fall as share prices tumbled.

Temasek chief executive Ho Ching said last week the company will focus more on Asia and trim its presence in Western economies.

Temasek will reduce its exposure to members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)–which groups industrialised countries–from 30 percent of its portfolio to 20 percent, she said.

Its Asian regional portfolio will stay at 40 percent, while Singapore investments will remain at 30 percent, said Ho, the wife of the city-state’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

Temasek will add new areas such as Latin America, Russia and Africa where its collective exposure will be 10 percent. (AFP)

Singapore, Malaysia seek to build new bridges

Singapore and Malaysia will consider literally building new bridges to improve an often uneasy relationship, their leaders said on Friday.

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said options to improve the relationship included better rail links, broadening a congested causeway between the two, or possibly building a new bridge to link eastern Singapore to Malaysian border state Johor.

Lee said his government could also support the Iskandar Malaysia project, a planned economic zone in Johor that would be Southeast Asia’s rival to China’s Pearl River manufacturing heartland to give both nations a boost in the global downturn.

“We stress the necessity to facilitate people and traffic flow on both sides, because the volume is growing and will grow further,” Lee said at a joint news conference with Malaysian counterpart Najib Razak.

Johor supplies at least half of Singapore’s water. Thousands of Malaysians commute from Johor to Singapore to work, while many Singaporeans travel to Johor for cheap shopping.

Malaysia and Singapore have had an uneasy history since the island-state split from Malaysia 44 years ago. Issues including water supplies, land reclamation, transport links and use of airspace still mar relations.

The Iskandar project has already attracted 42.6 billion ringgit ($12.2 billion) in investment and the plan is to turn it into an investment and logistics centre, duty free zone and tourist destination.

So far Singapore investors have given it a lukewarm response and analysts say it needs firms such as Southeast Asia’s largest property firm CapitaLand to develop Johor’s cheap land.

Singapore developers are wary after being burned by frequent and unexpected policy changes during the reign of former Malaysian leader Mahathir Mohamad, who feuded with Singapore’s first prime minister and Lee’s father, Lee Kuan Yew.

“Singapore investment is a key to success of this Iskandar project and for the Najib administration. Because of the economic crisis, there is a need to continue to have investment in Malaysia, especially from Singapore,” said Lee Hock Guan, researcher at Singapore’s Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.

Singapore prime minister sees further decline in economic growth

Singapore – Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said Thursday that the city state’s economic growth forecast for this year will have to be revised downwards from the current minus 2 per cent to minus 5 per cent as exports continue to be hit by the global economic slowdown.

But Lee said he did not think the decline would be double-digit.

Singapore’s exports have been hit hard and the global situation was not looking any better, Lee told reporters during a visit to a local training and jobs placement centre.

The Straits Times cited the premier as saying that retrenchments were likely to cross 10,000 jobs in the first quarter.

But government measures and schemes supporting and saving jobs have kept the numbers in check, added Lee. (dpa)