QUOTE(Cubalagi @ Dec 21 2025, 08:47 PM)
Foreign investments is 35-40% of epf assets. Last quarter was 39%.
Thos ia consolidated number and I dont see the point speculation between shariah and conventional.
Yeah, not much value in speculating, which is why I didn’t zoom in on portfolio composition differences earlier.
That said, since you brought it up, there is a fair and nuanced point to be made here.
Earlier, I was refering to overseas equity exposure, but sure, lets use 40% for discussion purposes.
When we talk about overseas/foreign investments, it simply means assets located outside Malaysia.
From there:
EPF Conv can invest across the full universe, subject to its usual internal filters.
EPF Shariah starts with the same universe, but then applies an additional layer of Shariah screening.
All else being equal, if we use the US equity market (S&P) as a rough guide, tech-related stocks make up roughly about 50% of market cap.
While banking, which many people here instinctively label as “non-Shariah” is closer to 13%.
(source from google)
So if around 40% of EPF’s assets are overseas, the portion that Shariah would not invest in (mainly banking) is roughly that 13% slice, which then gets reallocated elsewhere. In big-picture terms, that works out to only about a 5% difference at the total portfolio level.
Could it be a bit more? Sure.
Could it be less? Also possible.
Realistically, we’re probably talking about a range of 3% to 8% of the overall portfolio — not a huge structural difference.
And it’s also worth keeping in mind that both EPF Conv and EPF Shariah are perfectly allowed to invest in MAG7/Tech stocks from a Shariah perspective. So a lot of the core growth drivers are actually shared.
EPF Shariah may not invest fully into MAG7/Tech stocks for the difference also...