Raking In The Bounty of FELDA’s IPO
Raking in the Bounty of FELDA’s IPO
M. Bakri Musa
(www.bakrimusa.com)
In the run-up to the Initial Public Offering (IPO) of FELDA Global Ventures Holdings (FGH), there is little, in fact no discussion on how the exercise would benefit FELDA settlers. Surely that should be the foremost consideration. The only criterion upon which to judge the wisdom or success of any FELDA initiative, including this proposed IPO, would be to assess its impact on the settlers.
Instead the focus has been on bragging rights, as with trumpeting FGH to be the biggest IPO for the year, among the top 20 on the KLSE, and the world’s biggest plantation company. Such milestones are meaningful only if achieved as a consequence of the usual business activities and not through fancy paper-shuffling exercises. Apple recently surpassed Microsoft in market capitalization, but that was the consequence of Apple’s much superior products like iPads, iPods, and iPhones. Contrast that with earlier achievements of such now-defunct financial giants as AIG and Lehman Brothers that were based on fancy “financial engineering” instead of solid products and services.
Instead of delineating the potential benefits that would accrue on the settlers from this IPO, its proponents are content with dismissing the critics and imputing evil motives on their part. There are legitimate concerns that this exercise would prove to be nothing more than yet another fancy scheme for the politically powerful to cash out on a lucrative but under-priced government asset. We already have many ready examples of such greed.
Consider the National Feedlot Corporation (NFC) “cowgate” mess involving considerably much smaller sum of money. Despite the presence of high government officials on NFC’s board to safeguard the government’s interest, NFC’s senior managers still managed to subvert those publicly-subsidized loans to purchase luxury condominiums totally unrelated to the company’s activities. This oversight failure reflects both the incompetence of the government’s representatives in discharging their fiduciary responsibility, as well as the lack of integrity on the part of NFC’s management.
Such despicable omissions and spectacular failures are not unique only to NFC; they are endemic in government-linked corporations. Thus Malaysians have good reasons to believe that FGH would be no exception once the money starts rolling in.
It also does not escape the public’s attention that the man helming FGH, and thus whose hands would be at the till once the billions start pouring in from the IPO, is one Isa Samad, a former UMNO Vice-President. Not any VP however, but one who was found guilty by his party of “money politics” and subsequently suspended. UMNO is no paragon of virtue; to be found guilty by it would be akin to being called a slut by hookers. You have to be disgustingly gross.
It would be easy to blame Isa Samad. The bigger question, and one that has yet to be answered, is why did Prime Minister Najib choose such a shady character to helm this major corporation? That is as much a reflection of Najib as it is on Isa.
Peruse FGH current corporate structure. It has nearly over a hundred subsidiaries, associated companies, and joint ventures, many with overlapping functions, markets and products. Those units are created less in response to commercial needs, more to create opportunities for senior civil servants to be appointed to the many governing boards, and thus garnering extra income in the form of directors’ fees, in addition to their regular civil service pay. Ever wonder why these GLCs lack effective oversight and our government departments are shoddily run? You would think that their regular government jobs, diligently executed, would keep them fully occupied.
A more sinister reason for these GLC directorships is that they are an effective trick to trap the loyalty of civil servants. Be too critical of the idiotic ideas of your political superiors and you risk being left out on those lucrative board appointments. With Isa Samad, it is also a case of Najib buying Isa’s silence, for reasons best known only to the pair.
Corrupting A Noble Initiative
FELDA was the crown jewel of Tun Razak’s imaginative rural development scheme. It was to provide land to otherwise landless villagers, the equivalent of land grants homesteading to early American settlers. The other reason was to encourage Malays to undertake an internal migration of sorts by uprooting them from their tradition-bound villages to begin a new life unencumbered by prevailing non-productive cultural practices.
With the expertise of and financing from the government, those villagers would develop hitherto virgin jungles into productive rubber and palm oil plantations, with those settlers eventually getting title to their holdings. At about 14 acres each, those units were definitely economically viable. To make sure that those lands would survive the next and subsequent generations and not be endlessly subdivided, the settlers had to agree to dispense with their usual Islamic inheritance practices. Meaning, the property would be inherited by only one of the children.
The surprise was the absence of howling protests from the ulama to this clear departure from Islamic inheritance practices as everybody saw the wisdom of the move; to maintain the economic viability of these holdings.
If this IPO were to enhance the condition of the settlers, then it should be supported. FELDA is meant to serve the settlers, not the other way around. Isa Samad had it backwards when he dismissed the concerns of the settlers as voiced through their cooperatives.
In response to the settlers’ concerns, Isa suggested a portion of the proceeds be placed in a “Special Purpose Vehicle” specifically to meet their needs. Unfortunately he did not provide the specifics. Consequently this SPV risks degenerating into yet another honey jar to be passed around among the politically powerful bears.
In my forthcoming book, Liberating the Malay Mind, I put forth ideas on how to maximize the use of these GLCs in improving the lot of Bumiputras. The focus should be on investing in people – human capital – not companies. Companies are subject to business cycles; they can also be ruined by incompetent and corrupt managers. All you would be left with then are worthless stock certificates. Where is Bank Bumiputra today? Malaysia Airlines is in no great shape either, despite the billions expended through SPVs and other accounting gimmicks.
Invest in our people instead; the skills and knowledge they acquire would stay with them to benefit society through good and bad times. Thus I suggest selling these GLCs and putting the proceeds into an escrow account for the sole purpose of investing in and developing Bumiputra human capital.
Bringing the issue specifically to FGH, I would commit a third of the IPO proceeds to a special fund to be used to develop the human capital of the settlers and their children. That money would be used to air-condition their schools, build adequate laboratories and libraries, and to bring qualified teachers especially in English, science and mathematics. If you want the children of those settlers to be other than penorakas (homesteaders), the best route would be to provide them with superior education. That means their schools and teachers should be among the best; today they are among the worst.
I would use the funds to enrich the curriculum as with providing music classes. I would go further and provide free musical instruments and after-class music lessons, modeled after Venezuela’s highly successful El Sistema initiative. New York is modeling a similar Harmony program with its low-income students, and this week those students had the thrill of their lifetime when their orchestra was conducted by Placido Domingo. Gustavo Dudamel, the young conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, is a product of El Sistema, a tribute to Venezuela’s investment in human capital.
Similarly I would use the IPO funds to mechanize the operations on these plantations. Today palm nuts are still harvested in the same labor-intensive and back-breaking ways as they were 50 years ago; there is little innovation or mechanization. I fail to see why FELDA engineers could not design harvesting machines and trucks with hydraulic lifts like those used by utility repair workers to fix broken lines. Only through mechanization could the workers’ safety and health could be assured, and their productivity enhanced.
If through this IPO the lives of those FELDA settlers and their children were to be made better, then the initiative would find many ready supporters. What many fear is that this IPO would prove to be nothing more than a windfall for the likes of Isa Samad so they could acquire their luxury condos, fancy cars, and trophy wives.
February 26th, 2012 at 8:41 pm
Yes, all your comments are the truth but will the present government listen ?
Certainly not because the whole system is built on corruption, false values , incompetencies and a whole lot of cheating and getting away with it.
Only a change of government will see what you propose materilize.
Otherwise nothing will change.
February 26th, 2012 at 8:56 pm
You’re posting contains so many inaccuracies, you shouldn’t even write about it in the first place. First of all, Felda management has been actively going on the ground to explain in details of the listing of FGVH to the settlers. Second of all, the purpose of the listing is to consolidate and restructure the organization of nearly over a hundred subsidiaries, associated companies, and joint ventures, many with overlapping functions within Felda. Not only it will implement strict corporate governance, it will also allow transparency in the running of day-to-day operation. Obviously you do not understand the mechanics of an IPO. Why do you even comment on this matter? Because obviously you have no knowledge of it. You’re so out of touch of the real world here…
February 26th, 2012 at 9:34 pm
[...] By M. Bakri Musa [...]
February 26th, 2012 at 9:47 pm
Dr, your suggestions actually tally with the intent behind the listing, according to my layman’s understanding.
The funds raised are for the expansion of the Felda business, and create more opportunities for the generations and children of Felda, much like what you suggested. It seems to me the difference is that you suggestion asks that such development projects be carried out via a third organisation, while Felda wants to make that aim central by making it a goal of the organisation’s listing exercise.
My argument would be, why spend more effort on creating yet another body, and go through another round of the usual setting process, and search for suitable personalities to fill it, when its purposes can be streamlined into Felda?
February 27th, 2012 at 8:28 am
Sdr Bakri,
Thanks for taking interest in this issue. The controversy arising has been deafening , yet none of us are any wiser about what is really going on nor about the risks facing the penerokas. RPK himself has been too silent on this for comfort. It’s quite surprising that he’s not kept informed of the dirt that’s being kept under wrap.
Although it’s quite late the public ought to be told of how the exercise is being
carried out. They ought to understand the diagrammatic set-up of FGV and its relationship to the various Felda entities as they are now and after the privatisation, high-lighting on the dilution of their interests, if such is the case. Equally perplexing is how FGV comes to own some 350,000 hactares of plantations which it claims to be its assets, if all this times Felda was no more than merely managers and administrators for the settlers. Furthermore, rumours are abound that settlers are being promised RM 10K to 20K in cash immediately upon FGV listing. What can be the consideration for the payment ? Their land, their shares in Koperasi Felda, or the shares they are going to get from FGV ? But, first of all, what is the basis of the FGV share distribution, and the consideration therefor ?
March 1st, 2012 at 7:24 pm
Someone was offered 4,000 lots of Felda shares but on condition that they were given 30%………
March 9th, 2012 at 4:41 am
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March 24th, 2012 at 4:28 am
Well we do know one big alpha winner of a Felda Listing: CIMB!!!The Razak falmiy will be leaughing all the way to the bank (their own bank no less….). And yes I can also see a lot of UMNO cronies like Isa Samad already preparing their offshore accounts ready for their mega windfall.As for the settlers – I just hope it is a long term win, although I suspect it will be short term and will only be crumbs compared to the cronies.Not that I object to Felda being listed as being a PLC with a profit motive it will have to become more efficient and technology oriented with a hopefully more professional management team. Also one of the issues facing settlers has been that many of their children are not interested in agriculture and increasingly losing them to urban centres.However Rocky – I would be interested to know what will be the end result for the settlers in terms of thier livelihood and rights to the their land.And guys – I think we all know Rocky’s political leanings and we know our own, so his angle is no surprise – so telling him to fuck off from his own blog is pretty dumb and illogical. Just saying you disagree and explain why you do would make far more sense.