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Malaysia’s legal landscape for cross‑border insolvency changed fundamentally when the Cross‑Border Insolvency Bill 2025 received Royal Assent on 20 January 2026 and was enacted as the Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026. For the first time, Malaysia has a dedicated statutory mechanism, modelled on the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross‑Border Insolvency, through which foreign representatives can seek recognition of foreign proceedings in Malaysian courts and obtain enforceable relief. The Act creates new obligations for local creditors, redraws the boundaries of enforcement strategy for secured and unsecured claimants alike, and introduces cooperation duties that insolvency practitioners in Malaysia must now navigate.
Whether you are a general counsel evaluating exposure, a creditor protecting a recovery position, or a litigator preparing to contest or support a recognition application, the 2026 framework demands immediate, practical attention.
This guide delivers what most firm alerts omit: a litigation‑focused playbook covering the recognition process, enforcement tactics, creditor remedies, arbitration interaction, sample pleading elements and a step‑by‑step checklist for companies and creditors operating across Malaysian borders.
The Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026 adopts the core architecture of the UNCITRAL Model Law, establishing three categories of foreign proceedings that Malaysian courts may recognise:
A registered office or principal place of business creates a rebuttable presumption of COMI. The Act makes recognition of a foreign main proceeding mandatory once the statutory requirements are satisfied, subject to public policy exceptions. Relief on recognition of non‑main proceedings remains within the court’s discretion, and the Act lists factors the court must consider, including the protection of Malaysian creditor interests and the adequacy of safeguards for local assets.
Regulated financial institutions are carved out of the Act’s scope. Banks licensed under the Financial Services Act 2013 and Islamic Financial Services Act 2013, insurance and takaful operators, and entities regulated by Bank Negara Malaysia or the Securities Commission under specific prudential regimes are excluded. Their insolvency and restructuring remain governed by sector‑specific legislation and regulatory oversight. Industry observers expect the carve‑outs to be tested early, particularly where a foreign group restructuring includes a Malaysian‑regulated subsidiary.
| Feature | Practical Effect | Immediate Action |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory recognition (main proceedings) | Court must grant recognition if COMI presumption applies and no public policy bar | Review group structure to identify likely COMI designation for each entity |
| Discretionary relief (non‑main proceedings) | Court weighs local creditor protection before granting stay or asset freeze | Prepare creditor impact evidence early; file protective applications if needed |
| Regulated entity carve‑out | Banks, insurers and certain SC‑regulated entities excluded from Act | Confirm whether any group entity falls within the carve‑out and apply sector rules instead |
| Cooperation duty | Malaysian courts and officeholders must cooperate with foreign courts and representatives | Establish communication protocol with foreign counsel; anticipate joint hearings |
A foreign representative seeking recognition of foreign insolvency must apply to the High Court. The applicant must demonstrate that a foreign proceeding exists within the Act’s definition, a collective judicial or administrative proceeding in a foreign state under insolvency law in which the debtor’s assets and affairs are subject to control or supervision for the purpose of reorganisation or liquidation. The court applies a COMI test: a debtor company’s registered office is presumed to be the COMI unless evidence rebuts that presumption. For individuals, habitual residence serves as the default presumption. Once the court is satisfied that the proceeding qualifies as a foreign main proceeding, recognition is mandatory unless granting it would be manifestly contrary to Malaysian public policy.
The recognition application is supported by originating process and affidavit evidence. The applicant should prepare and file the following:
Upon recognition of a foreign main proceeding, the following relief attaches automatically: a stay of execution against the debtor’s assets in Malaysia, a stay of the right to transfer or encumber those assets, and suspension of the right to commence or continue individual proceedings against the debtor. The court may also grant discretionary relief, including entrusting asset distribution to the foreign representative, extending the stay, or granting access to examine witnesses and obtain documents. For non‑main proceedings, all relief is discretionary, and the court must be satisfied that the relief relates to assets within its jurisdiction or to information required for the administration of the foreign proceeding.
A sample prayer in a recognition application might read: “That this Honourable Court do recognise the proceeding commenced in [jurisdiction] on [date] as a foreign main proceeding within the meaning of the Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026, and that the automatic reliefs under the Act do apply.”
The Act creates a distinct pathway from the common law route for enforcing foreign judgments in Malaysia. A foreign insolvency‑related judgment, such as a preference avoidance order or a contribution order against directors, may still be enforced under the Reciprocal Enforcement of Judgments Act 1958 or through a fresh action at common law, provided the originating court had jurisdiction under Malaysian private international law principles. The new Act does not replace these routes; rather, it adds a parallel recognition mechanism specifically for foreign insolvency and restructuring proceedings. Practitioners should assess which pathway offers the most effective remedy: recognition under the Act (which triggers automatic or discretionary relief) or judgment enforcement (which yields an executable Malaysian court order).
One of the most consequential features of the Act is the enforcement of foreign moratorium in Malaysia. When a foreign main proceeding is recognised, the automatic stay operates to freeze creditor enforcement actions, including execution of Malaysian judgments, realisation of security and winding‑up petitions. This effectively extends the reach of a foreign moratorium into Malaysian territory. Creditors who wish to continue enforcement must apply for leave to lift the stay, demonstrating that their interests are inadequately protected or that the stay causes disproportionate prejudice. The likely practical effect will be that secured creditors with perfected Malaysian security will need to act swiftly: either completing enforcement before recognition is granted, or preparing stay‑lifting applications with supporting evidence of prejudice.
The Act enables foreign representatives to seek court assistance in implementing restructuring plans that affect Malaysian assets or creditors. The strategy typically involves two steps: first, obtaining recognition of the foreign proceeding; second, applying for discretionary relief that gives effect to the restructuring plan, for example, an order directing the transfer of Malaysian assets to a restructured entity or sanctioning a compromise with local creditors.
Key tactical considerations for cross‑border restructuring in Malaysia include:
Secured creditors with perfected charges over Malaysian assets retain priority treatment under the Act, consistent with existing Malaysian insolvency law. However, the automatic stay that follows recognition of a foreign main proceeding will suspend the right to realise security unless the court grants leave. Secured creditors should therefore consider accelerating enforcement timelines where a foreign insolvency is anticipated, perfecting any unperfected security before a recognition application is filed, and preparing applications for leave to enforce alongside evidence of adequate protection of the debtor’s estate.
Unsecured creditors have the right to participate in the foreign proceeding by filing proof of debt directly with the foreign representative or with the Malaysian court where a local distribution is ordered. The Act does not displace Malaysian rules on proof of debt, but it introduces the principle that foreign creditors are entitled to participate on equal terms with local unsecured creditors, a significant shift from prior practice. Cross‑border set‑off remains a contested area: the Act does not expressly address mutuality requirements for set‑off, and early indications suggest that Malaysian courts will apply existing common law principles on mutuality when evaluating set‑off claims in a cross‑border context.
Creditors or affected parties who wish to resist a recognition application have several arguments available. The public policy ground is the primary statutory defence: recognition will be refused if it would be manifestly contrary to Malaysian public policy. Beyond that, respondents may challenge the COMI determination, argue that the foreign proceeding does not meet the statutory definition, or contend that the foreign representative lacks proper authority. Forum non conveniens arguments, asserting that Malaysia is a more appropriate forum for the insolvency, may also be deployed, though the Act does not expressly incorporate this doctrine.
| Remedy / Obligation | Applies To | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Recognition of foreign main proceeding | Foreign representative seeking court recognition | 4–12 weeks (expedited if urgent relief needed) |
| Stay of creditor enforcement | Automatic on recognition of main proceeding | Immediate; lifting requires court leave |
| Proof of debt (cross‑border filing) | Foreign and local unsecured creditors | Per timelines set by foreign representative or court order |
| Enforcement of foreign judgment (common law) | Judgment creditor (not via Act) | Variable; may require fresh proceedings |
| Application to lift stay (secured creditor) | Secured creditor with perfected Malaysian security | 2–6 weeks from filing; expedited track available |
A persistent tension exists between arbitral autonomy and insolvency moratoria. Where a foreign main proceeding is recognised in Malaysia and the automatic stay takes effect, ongoing arbitral proceedings involving the debtor may be affected. The Act does not expressly override arbitration agreements or pending arbitral awards, but the stay on “commencing or continuing proceedings” is broadly drafted. Industry observers expect Malaysian courts to adopt a case‑by‑case approach, balancing the integrity of the arbitral process against the collective insolvency objectives. Emergency arbitral relief, such as interim measures under AIAC or SIAC rules, may survive the stay if the relief is protective rather than enforcement‑oriented, but creditors should not assume this.
The safest course is to seek court directions on whether arbitral proceedings may continue alongside a recognised insolvency.
The Act establishes a framework for cooperation between Malaysian courts, local officeholders and foreign representatives. Foreign insolvency practitioners do not require Malaysian qualification to be recognised as foreign representatives, but they must apply to the court and demonstrate their appointment under the originating jurisdiction’s law. Once recognised, they gain standing to apply for relief, examine witnesses, access debtor information, and participate in Malaysian proceedings. Malaysian officeholders, including liquidators and judicial managers, are obliged to cooperate with recognised foreign representatives to the maximum extent consistent with Malaysian law.
Risk alert: One of the most common cross‑border enforcement traps is failing to act before recognition is granted. Once the automatic stay attaches, enforcement options narrow dramatically. Creditors with live Malaysian enforcement proceedings should treat any indication of a foreign insolvency application as an urgent trigger to accelerate or protect those proceedings.
An originating summons or application for recognition should include: (a) a statement identifying the foreign proceeding and the jurisdiction in which it was commenced; (b) evidence of the debtor’s COMI; (c) a certified copy of the foreign court order or decision; (d) evidence of the applicant’s appointment as foreign representative; (e) a list of known Malaysian assets and creditors; and (f) a prayer for recognition and the specific relief sought.
A sample affidavit paragraph might read: “I, [name], am the duly appointed [liquidator/administrator] of [debtor company] pursuant to the order of the [foreign court] dated [date]. The debtor’s registered office and principal place of business are located in [jurisdiction], which constitutes the debtor’s centre of main interests within the meaning of Section [X] of the Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026. I respectfully seek recognition of the said proceeding as a foreign main proceeding and the consequent automatic relief provided by the Act.”
A respondent opposing recognition might structure arguments as follows:
| Milestone | Date | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Cross‑Border Insolvency Bill 2025 introduced in Parliament | 2025 | Monitor legislative progress; review Bill text for implications |
| Royal Assent granted (enacted as Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026) | 20 January 2026 | Begin compliance and litigation preparation immediately |
| Commencement date | To be confirmed by commencement order in Federal Gazette | Monitor Federal Gazette; align enforcement strategy to effective date |
| Expected High Court practice directions | Anticipated following commencement | Review and incorporate procedural requirements into all pending applications |
The Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026 marks a structural shift in how Malaysia handles multi‑jurisdictional insolvency. Companies with Malaysian exposure, creditors holding Malaysian security, and litigators advising on enforcement or restructuring must recalibrate their strategies now, before the first recognition applications are filed. The priority actions are clear: audit group structures and COMI designations, perfect Malaysian security, engage specialist cross‑border insolvency counsel, and prepare standby protective applications. Those who act early will preserve options; those who wait risk being caught by the automatic stay with limited room to manoeuvre.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Prem Shobana Gana Das at K.Siladass & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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