Behind Malaysia’s impressive initial public offering (IPO) figures lies a far less flattering reality. The local stock exchange is not just producing many IPOs – it is also producing many small or micro-IPOs. Over the past several years, Bursa Malaysia has seen a wave of micro-IPOs raising less than RM50mil. Many companies come to market with fundraising exercises so small they resemble private placements more than meaningful public listings.
The conversation around Bursa Malaysia has long centred on the lack of mega or “blockbuster” IPOs. That remains a serious issue. Malaysia has not consistently produced the kind of billion-ringgit listings that dominate regional exchanges such as Hong Kong, India or even Indonesia. But the rise of micro-IPOs deserves equal scrutiny because it points to something deeper about the state of Malaysia’s capital markets.
Between March 2025 and May 6, 2026, out of 50 listings on the smaller ACE Market, micro-IPOs represent 29 of them, or 58% to be exact. This partly explains the decline in total funds raised in the IPO space last year, despite an increase in the number of listings (see chart). In 2025, while there were 60 IPOs on Bursa Malaysia, the total funds raised was RM5.96bil, compared to RM7.44bil in 2024 (55 IPOs). This represents a decline of almost 20% in total funds raised. Meanwhile, average funds raised dropped from RM135.3mil in 2024 to RM99.3mil in 2025.
The number of ACE Market IPOs has increased tremendously in less than a decade. From just six listings in 2017, a total of 44 IPOs were recorded on the ACE Market in 2025. This represents nearly three-quarters of total IPOs on Bursa Malaysia – across the Main, ACE and LEAP Markets combined. With this, Malaysia’s IPO market also topped South-East-Asia by volume. The 2025 performance was notably the highest since 2006. In 2025, the domestic equity market also saw a first secondary listing – UMS Integrated Ltd – as well as the listing of a subsidiary of a South Korea Exchange-listed company in Malaysia. Deloitte Southeast Asia Ltd, in its Southeast Asia IPO Capital Market 2025 report, said the largest IPO of 2025 – Eco-Shop Marketing Bhd – came from the consumer industry.
In 2024, the largest IPO – 99 Speed Mart Retail Holdings Bhd – was also from the same sector. While Malaysia led the region in terms of listing volume, Deloitte noted that none of South-East-Asia’s four “blockbuster” IPOs originated from the country. The four IPOs, each raising more than US$500mil, came from Singapore, Vietnam and the Philippines.
A stock exchange cannot thrive on listing volume alone. It needs depth. It needs scale. It needs companies large enough to attract institutional participation, analyst coverage, foreign interest and sustained liquidity. Without these, the market risks becoming crowded with small counters that generate excitement for a few trading sessions before fading into illiquidity.
The
worrying part is not merely the existence of micro-IPOs. Smaller companies
should have access to public capital markets, and many successful global firms
began as small listings. The issue lies in the concentration of such offerings.
When too many listings raise only modest sums, it raises uncomfortable questions
about the overall quality and maturity of the pipeline.
In some cases, IPO exercises appear driven more by branding, shareholder exits or short-term valuation gains rather than long-term expansion strategies. The danger is a gradual dilution of market quality. Investors begin viewing IPOs less as opportunities to participate in future corporate champions and more as short-term trading vehicles. Market confidence becomes increasingly dependent on listing pops instead of long-term value creation.
Malaysia cannot afford that outcome. It risks being trapped in an uncomfortable middle ground where it produces many IPOs, but too few that genuinely move the needle. The irony is that Malaysia does have companies capable of scaling into larger listings. The country has strong ecosystems in semiconductors, healthcare, industrial technology, digital infrastructure and consumer brands. Regulators may also need to actively scout high-quality regional companies for listing in Malaysia. This would require more proactive “door-knocking” efforts, rather than waiting for firms to approach the exchange.
Reference:
Many IPOs, little depth, Ganeshwaran Kana, The Star, 11 May 2026






