Hong Leong sees Malaysian government supportive policies to provide competitive advantage in data center amid US AI chip curbs

0
11KB

While the recent US Framework for AI Diffusion presents a dent to Malaysia’s booming DC space, Hong Leong Investment Bank Research said Wednesday that Malaysian government supportive policies will provide a competitive advantage in data center (DC) investment.

The research house said in a note that Malaysia’s competitive advantage over its regional peers in the DC space stems in part from utility firm Tenaga Nasional Bhd (TNB)’s Green Lane Pathway (introduced Aug-23) – which expedites electricity supply for DCs, reducing implementation timelines from 36-48 months to a mere 12 months.

As DCs are electricity guzzlers, it noted the launch of Corporate Renewable Energy Supply Scheme (CRESS) (Sep-24) provides an avenue for large corporate consumers (including DC owners) to purchase renewable energy (RE) directly from independent power producers (IPPs) – this should appeal to DC investors that are members of RE100 (e.g. Bridge Data Centres, Microsoft, Google, EdgeConneX, Amazon, etc.).

“With ASEAN countries mostly on the same tier boat – i.e. none are Tier 1, most are Tier 2, while some are Tier 3 – we reckon that Malaysia’s supportive DC policies will continue to accord it a relative advantage in the region,” said the research house.

Despite the recent AI chips restrictions denting the prospects of Malaysia’s DC market, Hong Leong also takes solace from the fact that 91 percent of the $23.3 billion major investments announced over the past year came from global tech giants that are headquartered in the US.

“This could likely enable them to obtain a universal verified end user (UVEU) status, allowing them to import graphics processing units (GPUs) for their Malaysia based AI-DCs,” it said.

Meanwhile, with the recent framework being proposed during the final days of the Biden administration, and with Trump now helming the presidency, Hong Leong believes that (perhaps optimistically) there is potential for this to be rejigged over the 120 comment period – hopefully with softer restrictions.

To recap, the framework has drawn criticism from the likes of Nvidia and the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA), as well as EU nations where 17 of its 27 member countries
will face restrictions.

Although not directly related to the framework on AI chip curbs, Hong Leong noted that the newly minted president has deviated from some of Biden’s policies, namely (i) delaying the ban on TikTok and (ii) revoking the executive order on regulating AI.

Cited Knight Frank, Hong Leong highlighted that Malaysia’s existing DC information technology (IT) capacity stands at 505MW as of Dec-24, with future supply (under construction and committed) at 1,313MW – implying an eventual increase of +260 percent from current levels.

Separately, based on estimates by SemiAnalysis, it said Malaysia’s critical IT capacity stood at 792MW in 2024, and is projected to hit 3,240MW by 2027 – translating to a CAGR of 92 percent.

“SemiAnalysis reckons that the only use case for such an enormous sum of DC capacity is for AI,

“At the onset, this insinuates that Malaysia could be one of the key risk countries from the new AI chips restriction rules,” said the research house.

It is also noted that Deputy Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry (MITI) minister of Malaysia Liew Chin Tiong recently said that the recent export limitations on AI
chips is not expected to impact the operations of existing DCs in Malaysia – though staying conspicuously silent on its implications to the pipeline of new AI-DCs.

 

#MalaysiaDataCenters #AIDevelopment #RenewableEnergy #TechInvestment

Commandité
Rechercher
Commandité
Catégories
Lire la suite
Networking
Deloitte survey finds more than 40 percent of family offices are advancing technology strategies amid digital transformation
Family offices worldwide are accelerating their digital transformation to meet the evolving...
Par Ifvex 2025-06-23 06:50:59 0 6KB
Networking
MDEC partners Zhejiang University to spur AI, digital innovation economy
The Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC) and Zhejiang University have recently signed a...
Par Ifvex 2025-04-23 13:37:33 0 8KB
Networking
Robert Walters sees Malaysia is on track to secure over $40B in AI and data center investment by 2030
Malaysia is on track to secure over $40 billion in artificial intelligence (AI) and data center...
Par Ifvex 2025-09-18 12:31:23 0 844
Causes
VinFast advances ecosystem strategy in Philippines’ EV catch-up
With nearly 19,000 electric vehicles sold in 2024, the Philippines is looking to catch up in...
Par Ifvex 2025-07-17 01:10:33 0 5KB
Causes
DGGF commits $170,000 funding to support Foxmont Philippine Ventures Fund III
Dutch Good Growth Fund – Financing local SMEs (DGGF) will commit a funding of $170,000 to...
Par Ifvex 2025-07-29 05:33:03 0 3KB
Ifvex https://smartcontent.me