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Commercial Litigation Lawyers Malaysia 2026: ICAD, Arbitration Act 2024 & TPF

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The landscape for commercial litigation lawyers Malaysia has shifted decisively in 2026, driven by two reforms that together reshape how cross-border disputes are filed, funded and resolved. The Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 (Act A1737), gazetted on November 1, 2024, came into force on January 1, 2026, introducing Malaysia’s first statutory framework for third-party funding (TPF) in arbitration. Barely two months later, on March 2, 2026, the judiciary launched the International Commercial and Admiralty Division (ICAD) within the Kuala Lumpur High Court, creating a specialist docket with an ambitious nine-month case-disposal target. For General Counsel, CFOs and commercial directors managing disputes with a Malaysian nexus, these changes demand immediate action on forum selection, contract drafting and funder vetting.

Executive Summary and Key Action Points

Before examining each reform in detail, the following checklist distils the most urgent steps every commercial party should take in 2026. Treat this as a triage list, items one through four should be completed within the current quarter.

  • Audit existing arbitration clauses. The Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 alters the rules on the law governing arbitration agreements, multi-party arbitrator appointments and TPF disclosure. Every template clause should be reviewed against Act A1737.
  • Comply with TPF disclosure obligations immediately. Funded parties in arbitrations seated in Malaysia must disclose the existence and identity of their funder at the commencement of proceedings, or within 15 days of entering a funding agreement made after commencement.
  • Assess whether new disputes qualify for ICAD. International commercial disputes, admiralty claims and arbitration-related court applications now route through a specialist bench. ICAD’s active case management and nine-month target timeline may alter your cost-benefit analysis compared with arbitration.
  • Build funder due diligence into your litigation budget. With TPF now statutory, vetting funders for capital adequacy, conflicts of interest and settlement-approval rights is no longer optional, it is a governance obligation.
  • Preserve interim remedies early. ICAD judges are empowered to grant injunctions, freezing orders and other interim relief under compressed timelines. Early evidence preservation motions should be prepared in parallel with pleadings.
  • Update forum-selection fallback clauses. Contracts that default to “the courts of Malaysia” should specify whether ICAD jurisdiction is intended and whether arbitration remains the primary forum, with court applications as a backstop.
  • Engage specialist counsel now. The combined effect of statutory TPF rules and a new specialist court means that commercial litigation lawyers in Malaysia with dual ICAD and arbitration capability are in high demand. Early instruction secures the strongest teams.

ICAD Malaysia Explained, Scope, New Procedures and Qualifying Cases

ICAD is the most significant structural reform to Malaysia’s commercial court system in over a decade. Launched on March 2, 2026, it consolidates international commercial and admiralty work into a dedicated bench staffed by judges with specialist experience in cross-border disputes.

What Is ICAD?

The International Commercial and Admiralty Division (ICAD) is a specialist division of the Kuala Lumpur High Court established to hear complex cross-border commercial disputes and admiralty claims. According to the Chief Justice’s speech at the ICAD launch on March 2, 2026, the division was created to enhance Malaysia’s competitiveness as a dispute-resolution hub by providing predictable timelines and commercially literate judicial management. The Malaysian Bar welcomed the establishment, noting it signals the judiciary’s commitment to efficient resolution of international business disputes.

Case Types Assigned to ICAD

ICAD’s docket encompasses three broad categories. Understanding which disputes qualify is critical for commercial litigation lawyers in Malaysia advising multinational clients.

  • International commercial disputes. Cross-border contract claims, multi-party finance disputes, joint-venture breakdowns involving foreign parties, and complex commercial fraud matters where at least one party is domiciled outside Malaysia or the transaction has a substantial international element.
  • Admiralty division matters. Maritime claims including cargo damage, charter-party disputes, ship arrest applications, collision claims and crew-wage disputes. The admiralty division within ICAD ensures that urgent applications, particularly vessel arrest and security, are heard by judges with maritime expertise.
  • Arbitration-related court applications. Challenges to arbitral awards, applications to set aside or enforce awards, and interim-relief applications made in support of arbitral proceedings seated in Malaysia or abroad.

Typical examples include a multinational supply-chain dispute where goods transit through Port Klang, an investment-treaty-adjacent commercial claim between a Southeast Asian investor and a Malaysian counterparty, or an enforcement application following a KLRCA/AIAC-seated arbitration.

ICAD Case Management Mechanics and Target Timelines

The Chief Justice’s launch address set a nine-month aspirational target for the disposal of ICAD cases from filing to judgment. Industry observers expect this target to function as a performance benchmark rather than a hard deadline, but early indications suggest the judiciary intends to enforce strict compliance through active case management. Practical features of commercial case management Malaysia parties should anticipate include:

  • Early case-management conferences within weeks of filing, with firm trial dates set at the first hearing.
  • Limits on interlocutory applications designed to prevent tactical delay.
  • Phased disclosure obligations calibrated to the complexity of the dispute.
  • Encouragement of alternative dispute resolution (mediation or early neutral evaluation) before full trial.

For counsel accustomed to the more flexible timelines of the general commercial division, ICAD’s compressed schedule demands earlier preparation and more disciplined pleading strategies.

Arbitration Act 2024, What Has Changed and Why It Matters to Commercial Parties

The Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 (Act A1737), gazetted on November 1, 2024, and in force since January 1, 2026, represents the most comprehensive overhaul of Malaysia’s arbitration law since the principal Act of 2005. The amendments address long-standing gaps in the statutory framework and bring Malaysian arbitration law closer to international best practice.

Key Statutory Changes

The reforms introduced by Act A1737 touch multiple aspects of arbitration practice. The most commercially significant changes include:

  • Third-party funding framework (sections 46A–46I). For the first time, Malaysia has a statutory regime governing TPF in arbitration. The inserted provisions define qualifying funding arrangements, impose disclosure obligations and address conflicts of interest. This is a watershed change for the jurisdiction.
  • Law governing arbitration agreements. The amendment clarifies the rules for determining the law applicable to the arbitration agreement itself, distinct from the substantive law of the contract and the law of the seat. This resolves ambiguity that previously generated satellite litigation.
  • Multi-party arbitrator appointments. New provisions address the appointment of arbitrators in multi-party disputes, filling a procedural gap that could previously stall proceedings when more than two parties were involved.
  • Electronic signatures for awards. Arbitral awards may now be signed electronically, reflecting modern practice and facilitating the efficient issuance and transmission of awards across borders.
  • AIAC institutional changes. The amendments reinforce the role of the Asian International Arbitration Centre (AIAC) and update references to align with its current institutional structure.

Practical Implications for Contract Drafters and Counsel

Every standard-form arbitration clause used in Malaysian-nexus transactions should be reviewed against the Arbitration Act 2024. The most pressing updates include specifying the governing law of the arbitration agreement explicitly, incorporating TPF disclosure language where funding is contemplated, and ensuring multi-party appointment mechanisms are consistent with the new statutory provisions. Counsel should also verify that institutional rules (e.g., AIAC Rules) are compatible with the amended Act, particularly regarding electronic signatures and award-issuance procedures.

Change Date Practical Action
Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 gazetted November 1, 2024 Review arbitration clauses; update disclosure and TPF language.
Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 came into force January 1, 2026 Start complying with TPF disclosure obligations in all new arbitrations.
ICAD launched March 2, 2026 Evaluate ICAD suitability for relevant cross-border and admiralty cases; prepare to meet stricter case-management timelines.

Third-Party Funding in Malaysia, Rules, Disclosure and Risk Management

Third-party funding Malaysia now operates within a clear statutory framework under sections 46A–46I of the amended Arbitration Act 2005. These provisions apply to arbitrations seated in Malaysia and govern the relationship between funded parties, funders and the arbitral tribunal.

Statutory TPF Disclosure Obligations

The disclosure regime under the Arbitration Act 2024 is among the most prescriptive in the Asia-Pacific region. A party that has entered into a funding agreement must disclose the existence of the arrangement and the identity of the funder to all other parties and to the arbitral tribunal. The timing rules are precise:

  • Funding agreement in place at commencement. Disclosure must be made at the time of commencing the arbitration.
  • Funding agreement entered after commencement. Disclosure must be made within 15 days of the date the agreement is concluded.
  • Scope of disclosure. The funded party must identify the funder by name. The statute does not require disclosure of the terms of the funding agreement (e.g., the funder’s return or success fee), but the tribunal retains discretion to order further disclosure where necessary to address conflicts of interest.

These obligations apply to both domestic and international arbitrations seated in Malaysia. Failure to comply may expose the funded party to adverse costs consequences or, in extreme cases, provide grounds for challenging the award’s enforceability.

Funder Vetting and Red Flags, Due Diligence Checklist

The statutory framework places the burden of funder selection squarely on the funded party and its counsel. With TPF in arbitration now lawful, commercial parties should conduct rigorous due diligence before entering any funding arrangement. The following table outlines the essential checks:

Check Why It Matters Risk Rating
Capital adequacy and funding track record Ensures the funder can meet adverse-costs obligations and sustain funding through trial/appeal. High
KYC and anti-money-laundering compliance Prevents reputational risk and potential regulatory exposure. High
Conflicts of interest (funder’s portfolio) A funder with interests in an opposing party or related disputes creates disqualification risk. High
Control rights and settlement approval Funders with veto power over settlement can compromise the funded party’s autonomy. Medium–High
Confidentiality protections Funding agreements may require disclosure of privileged materials; carve-outs must be negotiated. Medium
Termination provisions and clawback rights Abrupt funder withdrawal mid-proceedings can leave the funded party exposed. Medium
Jurisdiction and governing law of the funding agreement Mismatches between the law governing funding and the law of the arbitration create enforcement complications. Medium

Funding Structures and Conflict Scenarios

The Arbitration Act 2024 effectively abolishes the common-law doctrines of champerty and maintenance as barriers to third-party funding Malaysia arbitrations, aligning the jurisdiction with Singapore and Hong Kong. Typical funding structures include portfolio funding (covering multiple disputes for a single client), single-case funding with a percentage return on recovery, and hybrid arrangements combining legal-fee insurance with success-based funding. Conflicts may arise where a funder holds investments in a competing business or where multiple funded parties in the same arbitration have different funders with overlapping portfolios. The CIArb 2025 Guideline on Third-Party Funding in International Arbitration provides a useful international benchmark for managing these scenarios.

ICAD vs Arbitration, Forum Selection Decision Matrix for GCs

One of the most consequential decisions facing commercial litigation lawyers Malaysia-wide in 2026 is forum selection. The establishment of ICAD creates a genuine alternative to arbitration for cross-border commercial disputes. The matrix below assists General Counsel in evaluating the right forum for each dispute.

Decision Matrix

Consideration ICAD (Court) Arbitration
Confidentiality Court proceedings are generally public, though confidentiality orders may be sought in limited circumstances. Proceedings are private and confidential by default under most institutional rules.
Speed Nine-month aspirational target from filing to judgment; active case management enforces compressed timelines. Varies; AIAC Fast Track rules target six months but standard cases commonly exceed 12 months.
Cost Court filing fees are fixed and relatively low; no arbitrator fees. Legal costs still depend on complexity. Arbitrator fees, institutional administration fees and hearing-room costs add a significant layer.
Interim relief Full range of interim relief available (Mareva injunctions, Anton Piller orders, freezing orders) with the coercive power of contempt. Tribunal may grant interim measures, but enforcement requires court assistance; emergency arbitrator provisions available under AIAC rules.
Enforceability abroad Enforcement of ICAD judgments abroad requires bilateral treaties or common-law recognition; more limited than arbitral awards. Awards enforceable in 170+ jurisdictions under the New York Convention (1958).
Choice of decision-maker No party choice; assigned by court registry to specialist ICAD judges. Parties select arbitrators based on expertise, availability and neutrality.
Appeal Full appellate rights to the Court of Appeal and Federal Court. Extremely limited grounds for setting aside or appeal; finality is a core feature.
Third-party funding No statutory TPF framework for court litigation; common-law champerty/maintenance rules still apply. Statutory TPF framework under ss.46A–46I of the amended Arbitration Act 2005.

Practical Scenarios

Scenario 1, Multi-jurisdictional supply-chain dispute with assets in Malaysia. A European manufacturer sues a Malaysian distributor for breach of an exclusive distribution agreement worth RM 80 million. Assets are located in Penang and Selangor. ICAD is likely the better forum: the full suite of interim relief (including freezing orders over Malaysian assets) is available without the additional step of court enforcement, and the compressed timeline aligns with the claimant’s commercial urgency. Arbitration would be preferred only if the contract contains an existing arbitration clause or if cross-border enforcement is critical.

Scenario 2, Maritime claim against a carrier. A cargo owner seeks damages for containerised goods damaged in transit through Port Klang. The admiralty division within ICAD is purpose-built for this claim. Ship arrest is available as an urgent remedy, and the specialist bench ensures familiarity with Hague-Visby Rules and bills of lading. Arbitration under a charter-party clause may still apply if the bill of lading incorporates an arbitration provision.

Scenario 3, Investor-supplier cross-border debt with funder interest. A Singaporean investor pursues a RM 25 million debt claim against a Malaysian supplier. The investor has secured third-party funding. Arbitration is the natural choice: the statutory TPF framework applies, the New York Convention ensures enforceability of any award in Singapore, and confidentiality protects the investor’s commercial relationships.

Case Management and Litigation Tactics in ICAD, Winning the Timetable Game

ICAD’s compressed timelines require a fundamentally different approach to commercial case management in Malaysia. Counsel who wait for trial dates before preparing their case will find themselves at a structural disadvantage.

Early Evidence Preservation and Interim Relief

The single most important tactical advantage in ICAD proceedings is early application for interim relief. Mareva-style freezing orders, Anton Piller search orders and interim injunctions are all available, and ICAD judges are expected to hear urgent applications on an expedited basis. Counsel should prepare interim-relief applications in parallel with the statement of claim, ensuring that supporting affidavits, asset-tracing evidence and undertakings as to damages are ready for filing on day one. In cross-border disputes, coordination with counsel in foreign jurisdictions to obtain complementary freezing orders is essential.

Document Disclosure Strategy and Targeted Pleadings

ICAD’s active case management is expected to limit the scope of discovery to documents genuinely relevant to the issues in dispute. Broad “train of inquiry” disclosure requests are unlikely to be permitted. Counsel should draft precise categories of documents at the outset, tie each category to a specific pleaded issue, and be prepared to justify the relevance and proportionality of every request at the first case-management conference. Phased trials, where liability is determined before damages, may be ordered by the court to streamline proceedings.

Admiralty Practicalities, Urgent Arrest, Security and Specialist Judges

For admiralty matters within ICAD, the critical tactical consideration is speed. Ship arrest applications must be filed and heard before the vessel departs Malaysian waters. The international commercial dispute resolution practice guide on our platform provides further context on procedural requirements. Counsel should maintain standing arrest bundles, including pre-drafted writs in rem, supporting affidavits and undertakings. Security demands should be calibrated to the full value of the claim plus interest and costs.

ICAD readiness, 8 things counsel must prepare:

  • Complete statement of claim and defence within four weeks of filing
  • Interim-relief application bundle (affidavits, draft orders, undertaking as to damages)
  • Targeted disclosure categories tied to specific pleaded issues
  • Witness statements in draft form before the first case-management conference
  • Expert reports instructed early, with clear terms of reference
  • Realistic trial-time estimate and skeleton argument outline
  • Settlement authority from the client before the first hearing
  • Costs budget prepared in accordance with any practice directions issued by ICAD

Enforcement of Judgments and Awards, Malaysia and Cross-Border

The enforceability of a judgment or award determines its commercial value. The enforcement landscape in Malaysia differs significantly depending on whether the outcome is an ICAD court judgment or an arbitral award.

Enforcement of ICAD Judgments vs Arbitral Awards

ICAD judgments are enforceable domestically through the standard writ of execution, garnishee proceedings or charging orders. Cross-border enforcement, however, depends on bilateral arrangements. Malaysia has reciprocal enforcement treaties with a limited number of jurisdictions, and enforcement in non-treaty countries requires fresh proceedings based on the judgment as a debt. By contrast, arbitral awards benefit from the New York Convention framework, which Malaysia acceded to, permitting enforcement of awards in over 170 signatory states. For parties whose enforcement targets are in multiple jurisdictions, this remains a decisive advantage of arbitration over court litigation.

Practical Enforcement Playbook

Effective enforcement begins before the dispute is resolved. Parties should conduct asset-tracing during proceedings, obtain freezing orders to prevent dissipation, and plan the enforcement route at the outset. For arbitral awards, the procedure involves filing the award with the Malaysian High Court (or the court of the enforcement jurisdiction) together with the arbitration agreement and certified translations. Grounds for refusal are narrow and mirror Article V of the New York Convention. For ICAD judgments enforced abroad, the likely practical effect will be that parties need to bring fresh actions in the target jurisdiction, presenting the judgment as evidence of the underlying debt. The Malaysia lawyer directory on our platform can assist in identifying enforcement counsel in the relevant jurisdiction.

Choosing Counsel and Funding Partners, Evaluation Templates

The 2026 reforms elevate the importance of selecting commercial litigation lawyers Malaysia clients can rely on for both ICAD proceedings and arbitration. The right counsel will have demonstrable experience across both forums and the analytical rigour to advise on forum selection at the outset.

How to Vet Law Firms

When evaluating firms, General Counsel should assess the following criteria:

  • Track record in both ICAD and AIAC arbitration. Dual capability is now essential. Firms without arbitration experience may struggle with the TPF framework, while firms without court experience may be unable to secure interim relief effectively.
  • Team continuity. ICAD’s compressed timelines penalise firms that rotate associates mid-case. Confirm the team that will handle the matter from filing through judgment.
  • Budget management and fee transparency. Request fixed-fee or capped-fee arrangements for discrete phases. Compare firm estimates against the expected duration of ICAD proceedings (nine months) and arbitration (12–18 months).
  • Regional network. Cross-border disputes require coordination with counsel in other jurisdictions for enforcement, asset tracing and parallel interim relief.

How to Vet Funders

With the statutory TPF framework now in force, funded parties bear responsibility for selecting reputable funders. Refer to the due diligence checklist earlier in this guide and prioritise the following: capital adequacy (request audited financials), a clean litigation record (no adverse findings by tribunals or courts regarding funder conduct), explicit contractual protections limiting funder control over settlement decisions, and robust confidentiality provisions that do not require waiver of legal professional privilege. The international benchmarks set out in the CIArb 2025 Guideline on Third-Party Funding in International Arbitration offer a useful reference framework.

Contract Drafting Checklist and Sample Clause Bank for Commercial Litigation Lawyers Malaysia

The Arbitration Act 2024 changes and ICAD’s establishment require a fresh review of dispute-resolution clauses in all commercial contracts with a Malaysian nexus. The following checklist identifies the key clauses to update or insert.

  • Seat and governing law of the arbitration agreement. Specify the seat of arbitration (e.g., Kuala Lumpur) and the governing law of the arbitration agreement as distinct from the substantive law of the contract. Example: “The arbitration agreement contained in this clause shall be governed by the laws of Malaysia.”
  • TPF disclosure clause. Where funding is contemplated, include a contractual obligation to disclose TPF arrangements in accordance with sections 46A–46I of the Arbitration Act 2005 (as amended). Example: “Any party that enters into a third-party funding agreement in connection with a dispute arising under this contract shall disclose the existence and identity of the funder in accordance with the Arbitration Act 2005.”
  • Interim remedies carve-out. Preserve the right to seek interim relief from ICAD or any court of competent jurisdiction notwithstanding the arbitration agreement. Example: “Nothing in this clause shall prevent any party from applying to the ICAD or any court of competent jurisdiction for interim or conservatory measures.”
  • Assignment of proceeds. Where TPF is involved, address whether claims or proceeds may be assigned to the funder. Example: “No party shall assign its claims or the proceeds of any award or judgment without the prior written consent of the other party.”
  • Funder confidentiality and settlement approval. Include a provision that funding agreements must not grant the funder control over settlement negotiations or access to privileged communications without the funded party’s express consent.
  • Forum-selection fallback. Where ICAD is the preferred court forum, specify this expressly: “Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract shall be submitted to the International Commercial and Admiralty Division of the Kuala Lumpur High Court.”
  • Multi-party arbitrator appointment. In multi-party contracts, specify the appointment mechanism to avoid deadlock. Example: “In the event of multi-party proceedings, the appointing authority shall be the Director of the AIAC.”
  • Electronic signatures. Confirm that arbitral awards signed electronically are accepted under the agreement, consistent with the Arbitration Act 2024 amendments.

Conclusion

The 2026 reforms to Malaysia’s dispute-resolution landscape, the Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 and the launch of ICAD, create both opportunity and obligation for commercial parties. Experienced commercial litigation lawyers Malaysia stakeholders engage now will be those best positioned to navigate forum selection, structure compliant funding arrangements and enforce outcomes across borders. Early clause review, funder vetting and tactical preparation for ICAD’s compressed timelines are no longer discretionary, they are baseline requirements. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides access to specialist counsel who can assist with each of these steps.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kenneth Koh at Xavier & Koh Partnership (XK Law), a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Chief Justice Speech, ICAD Launch (Mahkamah Kehakiman)
  2. Mahkamah Tinggi ICAD Directory (Kuala Lumpur Courts)
  3. Malaysian Bar Press Release on ICAD
  4. Bernama Report on ICAD Launch
  5. Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024, Act A1737
  6. Baker McKenzie, International Arbitration Yearbook 2024–2025: Malaysia
  7. Mondaq, Arbitration Updates: Malaysia’s 2026 Arbitration Reform
  8. Richard Wee Chambers, Arbitration Amendment Bill 2024: Third-Party Funding
  9. CIArb 2025 Guid

FAQs

What is ICAD and which commercial cases will go to the ICAD in Malaysia?
ICAD is the International Commercial and Admiralty Division of the Kuala Lumpur High Court, launched on March 2, 2026. It handles international commercial disputes, admiralty claims and arbitration-related court applications involving cross-border elements.
Act A1737 introduces sections 46A–46I, creating a statutory TPF framework. Funded parties must disclose the funder’s identity at arbitration commencement or within 15 days of entering a post-commencement funding agreement.
ICAD suits disputes requiring urgent interim relief, lower costs and Malaysian asset enforcement. Arbitration is preferable when confidentiality, party-appointed decision-makers and New York Convention enforceability across 170+ jurisdictions are priorities.
Update arbitration clauses to specify the governing law of the arbitration agreement, insert TPF disclosure provisions, add interim-remedies carve-outs for ICAD applications, and address multi-party appointment mechanisms consistent with Act A1737.
Assess capital adequacy through audited financials, verify KYC and anti-money-laundering compliance, check for conflicts of interest across the funder’s portfolio, and negotiate contractual limits on funder control over settlement and privileged information.
Yes. Under sections 46A–46I of the Arbitration Act 2005 (as amended), funded parties must disclose the existence and identity of the funder at commencement or within 15 days of a post-commencement funding agreement.
The Chief Justice set a nine-month aspirational target for case disposal at the March 2, 2026 launch. Industry observers expect this to function as a performance benchmark enforced through active judicial case management.

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Commercial Litigation Lawyers Malaysia 2026: ICAD, Arbitration Act 2024 & TPF

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