Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp (SMBC) is looking to back a push by Japanese firms planning to invest in Malaysia’s Shariah-compliant halal market, an SMBC official has said.
Japanese companies active in food, cosmetics, logistics, transportation and storage are keen to tap the Malaysian market in a drive to appeal to Muslim customers globally, Yoshimi Gunji, the head of SMBC’s Malaysia operations told Reuters in a recent interview.
He said the bank was facilitating such investments.
“For the whole supply chain for the halal industry, there’s interest...That’s one area where SMBC is really focused on,” Gunji said. He declined to identify firms considering Malaysian investments, nor give details of how much finance SMBC might be involved in lining up.
Gunji said SMBC will also focus on property and project financing in Malaysia, particularly big-ticket items such as the high-speed rail project between Kuala Lumpur and Singapore. Some Malaysian media reports have said the rail project could cost about 50bn ringgit ($12bn).
Muslim-majority Malaysia aims to be a global halal hub by 2020, when the halal industry is expected to contribute 8.7% to the country’s GDP, according to government agency Halal Industry Development Corp.
The global halal market, which has already attracted global consumer and cosmetics giants like Unilever and L‘Oreal, is currently estimated at $2.3tn, covering both food and non-food sectors, according to the agency.
To be halal-certified, products must not contain traces of pork, alcohol or blood, and must be made on factory lines free of contamination risk.
Gunji said SMBC, a core banking unit of Japan’s third-largest lender Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, was looking to expand its halal-related business globally after kicking off in Malaysia.

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