Disclaimer
The views and interpretations expressed in this write-up are strictly my own personal opinion and are provided for general discussion purposes only. They are not intended to prejudice, influence, or interfere in any ongoing investigations or proceedings by any regulatory authority, enforcement agency, or competent body.
All matters referenced remain subject to further verification, legal determination, and due process. No conclusion should be drawn as a statement of fact or final finding.
It is fully acknowledged that the ultimate decision and legal outcome rest solely with the relevant authorities and/or the courts of law, based on evidence and applicable legislation.
1. Governing Law for CDS Accounts
The operation and ownership of Central Depository System (CDS) accounts in Malaysia is primarily governed by:
- The Securities Industry (Central Depositories) Act 1991 (SICDA)
- The Capital Markets and Services Act 2007 (CMSA 2007)
- Rules and guidelines issued by the Securities Commission Malaysia (SC) and Bursa Malaysia Depository
Under the current regulatory framework, a CDS account is generally opened either by:
- The beneficial owner of the securities, or
- A recognised authorised nominee or intermediary
This establishes a clear principle: securities ownership and account control must be traceable within regulated structures.
2. Recognised Nominee and Custodial Structures (Legal Flexibility?)
Malaysia’s capital market system does allow for holding securities indirectly through regulated mechanisms, including:
- Authorised Nominees (AN)
- Exempt Authorised Nominees (EAN)
- Licensed custodians
- Trustee arrangements
However, these structures are only valid when:
- Properly established under law
- Properly disclosed to the relevant authorities
- Operated within regulatory compliance requirements
The key distinction is that these are formal, regulated arrangements, not informal or private family-based understandings.
If I read this right, arrangements such as “a relative using another person’s CDS account for convenience” should not fall within legally recognised nominee structures.
3. Legal Ownership and Regulatory Interpretation
Under CDS and securities law principles:
- The person whose name appears in the CDS account is generally treated as the legal owner
- Any deviation from this requires a legally recognised nominee or trust structure
- Private or undisclosed arrangements do not override statutory ownership presumptions
Regulatory enforcement history shows that misuse of CDS accounts has led to penalties. For example, in a prior SC enforcement case involving an individual was fined a total RM150,000.00 for opening or using a CDS account in another person’s name for trading purposes, demonstrating that such practices can constitute breaches of securities regulations.
4. Key Legal and Factual Questions in Disputes
In cases involving disputed ownership or control of CDS accounts, regulators typically assess:
- Who is the beneficial owner of the shares?
- Who exercised control over trading decisions?
- Who provided buy/sell instructions?
- Whether the account structure was a legitimate nominee arrangement
- Whether disclosure requirements were properly fulfilled
These questions are central to determining whether there has been a regulatory breach.
5. Regulatory Findings and Scope Limitations
In a past clarification (2022), the Securities Commission indicated that its findings were based on the conclusion that the named account holder exercised control over the account, and therefore no breach of the specific SICDA provision under review was established. I am not questioning the outcome but I fear such findings are typically limited in scope and do not necessarily resolve:
- Governance concerns
- Ethical or conflict-of-interest considerations
- Declaration requirements under other frameworks
These remain subject to separate regulatory or institutional standards.
6. Corporate Governance Perspective
From a governance standpoint, a core principle applies:
Securities registered in an individual’s CDS account are generally treated as belonging to that individual unless a properly structured and disclosed nominee arrangement exists.
This is why issues involving shareholding declarations particularly among senior public officeholders often attract heightened scrutiny in relation to:
- Transparency
- Accountability
- Integrity of disclosure systems
Where discrepancies arise between declared assets and actual holdings, it may raise governance concerns that require formal investigation.
7. Importance of Independent Review and Due Process
When allegations or inconsistencies arise, the appropriate approach is:
- Independent investigation by competent authorities
- Proper documentation review
- Reliance on legal and evidential standards
An independent investigation mechanism strengthens institutional credibility and ensures findings are based on fact rather than speculation.
8. Whistleblowing, Misuse Risks, and Safeguards
While whistleblowing mechanisms are essential for detecting misconduct, concerns may arise when:
- Information originates from commercial competitors
- Reports are potentially motivated by market competition rather than public interest
- Enforcement channels are used strategically in corporate rivalry
- A proven bribe-giver turned into whistleblower
This does not invalidate whistleblowing as a principle, but highlights the need for:
- Rigorous screening of complaints
- Independent verification of evidence
- Safeguards against abuse of enforcement processes
Such controls help ensure that regulatory action remains grounded in law, evidence, and fairness, rather than being influenced by external strategic interests.
SO, WHAT'S NEXT?
PROPOSED AMENDMENTS AND REGULATORY ENHANCEMENTS - (To be considered AFTER the completion of investigations and the presentation of findings)
9. Clearer Statutory Definition of Beneficial Ownership in CDS Context
Current frameworks already imply beneficial ownership principles, but enforcement disputes often arise from interpretation gaps.
Suggestion:
- Introduce a more explicit statutory definition of “beneficial owner” within SICDA/CMSA alignment
- Clearly distinguish between: (a) Legal owner (CDS account holder), (b) Beneficial owner (economic controller) (c) Nominee holder (regulated intermediary)
This would reduce ambiguity in cases involving indirect control or informal arrangements.
10. Mandatory Beneficial Ownership Disclosure System
At present, disclosure is situation-dependent and not always centralised.
Suggestion:
- Establish a centralised beneficial ownership declaration module within CDS systems
- Require declaration of: Whether shares are held for self or for another party Identity of ultimate beneficial owner (where applicable)
- Make updates time-bound and transaction-triggered
This would improve transparency without disrupting market operations.
11. Strengthening Rules on Informal Nominee Arrangements
The legal distinction between regulated nominee structures and informal arrangements is clear in principle, but enforcement challenges persist.
Suggestion:
- Introduce explicit prohibition language against: “Informal custodial holding through another individual’s CDS account”
- Provide clearer sanctions and thresholds for breach classification
- Require written declaration for any authorised holding arrangement
12. Enhanced Audit Trail and Trading Instruction Traceability
Disputes often revolve around “who controlled trading decisions.”
Suggestion:
- Require intermediaries to maintain enhanced audit logs showing: Origin of trading instructions (where feasible) Device/IP or authorised channel tracking
- Strengthen evidentiary standards for regulatory investigations
This would support clearer factual determination in disputes.
13. Beneficial Ownership Registry for High-Impact Holders
To balance transparency and privacy:
Suggestion:
- Introduce a tiered disclosure system, where: Ordinary investors retain standard confidentiality Politically exposed persons (PEPs), directors, and senior public officers have enhanced disclosure obligations
- Align with international anti-corruption and AML practices
14. Strengthened Whistleblowing Safeguards Against Abuse
Whistleblowing remains essential but may be vulnerable to misuse in competitive environments.
Suggestion:
- Require preliminary credibility screening filters before formal escalation
- Introduce penalties for knowingly malicious or commercially motivated false reporting
- Strengthen independent review panels for sensitive cases
15. Clarification of Legal Effect vs Governance Standards
Some disputes arise because legal compliance and governance expectations are not always aligned.
Suggestion:
- Introduce statutory guidance clarifying: Compliance with SICDA/CMSA ≠ automatic satisfaction of governance disclosure standards
- Encourage parallel reporting standards for public officeholders
CONCLUSION
Malaysia’s CDS and securities framework is built on a clear legal principle: ownership and control of securities must be properly structured, disclosed, and traceable within regulated systems. While nominee arrangements are permitted, they must strictly comply with legal and regulatory requirements.
Where irregularities, discrepancies, or disputes arise, resolution must rely on formal legal processes, regulatory investigation, and transparent governance standards to maintain public trust and market integrity.
The amendment suggestions is aimed to strengthen clarity, reduce ambiguity, and improve public confidence in the regulatory framework. Any implementation would, of course, require detailed consultation with regulators, market participants, and legal experts to ensure balance between transparency, efficiency, and market integrity.
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