Key Takeaways:
- Genting Vista issued an unrated RM3.0 billion Series 1 medium-term note under a RM5.0 billion programme.
- The proceeds will redeem RM3.0 billion of notes previously issued by Genting RMTN to part-finance the takeover of Genting Malaysia.
- Series 1 notes were issued at par for one- to five-year tenures, at three-month KLIBOR + 1.80% per annum.
- Affin Hwang and AmInvestment acted as Lead Managers, and Genting RMTN has completed the RM3.0 billion redemption.
Genting Bhd’s subsidiary Genting Vista Bhd has completed an unrated medium-term note (MTN) issuance totalling RM3.0 billion, the group said in a Bursa Malaysia filing on 30 December 2025. The Series 1 notes were issued under Genting Vista’s RM5.0 billion unrated MTN programme and were placed at par with tenures ranging from one to five years.
Genting RM3 billion MTN
The proceeds from the Series 1 issuance will be used to redeem MTN previously issued by Genting RMTN Bhd, a wholly owned Genting subsidiary. Those earlier notes had been employed to part-finance the acquisition of ordinary shares in Genting Malaysia Bhd as part of Genting’s takeover offer earlier this year. Genting RMTN has today fully redeemed the aggregate RM3.0 billion nominal value of MTN issued on 10, 20 and 27 November and 5 December 2025 under its RM10.0 billion MTN programme.
Genting said the Series 1 notes carry an interest rate of three-month KLIBOR plus 1.80 percentage points per annum. The issuance was arranged by Lead Managers Affin Hwang Investment Bank Bhd and AmInvestment Bank Bhd.
Market participants view the move as a routine corporate refinancing intended to simplify Genting’s group-level debt structure and replace short-term obligations with medium-dated paper. By issuing under Genting Vista rather than Genting RMTN, the group appears to be consolidating the refinancing within its wider MTN programme while maintaining flexibility on tenors.
Issuances priced at a spread over KLIBOR remain common for Malaysian corporate borrowers seeking to balance cost and maturity. The three-month KLIBOR reference means the effective coupon on the notes will vary with short-term money market conditions, but the 1.80 percentage point margin positions the notes competitively among similarly rated corporate issuances in the domestic market.
The redemption of the earlier Genting RMTN tranches clears the RM3.0 billion obligation that had been used to help fund the share acquisition in Genting Malaysia. That transaction, executed under the group’s wider corporate strategy, required interim financing which is now being replaced by the medium-term facility.
Affin Hwang and AmInvestment acted as joint lead managers for the Series 1 issuance. Their role included bookrunning and placement among institutional investors, enabling Genting Vista to secure the required nominal value at par.
Genting’s approach is in line with common practice among Malaysian corporates that seek to manage refinancing risk by staggering maturities and reissuing debt under existing MTN programmes. The move is also likely intended to preserve liquidity and maintain access to capital markets while the group integrates the acquisition into its balance sheet.
Investors will monitor forthcoming financial disclosures for any impact on group leverage and interest expense. For now, the transaction represents a straightforward refinancing and redemption cycle rather than a change in strategic direction for the Genting group.

















