In 2025, something previously considered unthinkable happened: the Malaysian ringgit appreciated by roughly 5% against the Singapore dollar in a single year.
This move was not random. It was driven by a stronger Malaysian economy and a clear increase in foreign direct investment and capital inflows into the country.
In my view, this is not a one-off event. A continued annual appreciation of around 5% is likely to persist for the next few years. As a result, Malaysians holding Singapore assets may continue to experience an erosion of their wealth in ringgit terms, even if Singapore property prices continue to rise.
That outcome may feel uncomfortable, but it is simply the consequence of holding assets denominated in a currency that is no longer structurally strengthening against the ringgit.
Why the 5% Continued Appreciation Will Continue
The 2025 appreciation of the ringgit against the Singapore dollar was widely dismissed as a temporary anomaly. In reality, it marks the start of a multi-year normalization cycle, not a short-term deviation. As of Feb 2026, the Ringgit has already appreciated 1.3% against the Sing Dollar in just under 2 months.
Several structural forces support the case for continued appreciation.
1. Malaysia Has Entered a Sustained Capital Inflow Phase
Malaysia is no longer merely benefiting from a cyclical recovery. It is entering a structural capital inflow phase driven by:
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Manufacturing reshoring and “China+1” supply-chain strategies
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Significant investments in semiconductors, data centers, and energy
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Large-scale infrastructure spending and industrial ecosystem development
Foreign direct investment is sticky capital. Unlike short-term portfolio flows, FDI does not exit quickly based on sentiment or market volatility. As long as Malaysia continues absorbing real, productive investment, structural demand for the ringgit will rise year after year, placing sustained upward pressure on the currency.
This trend is already visible. Even Singapore-based companies, such as AEM, have begun locating manufacturing operations to Malaysia — a clear signal of shifting regional cost and competitiveness dynamics. In the semiconductor logistics supply chain, Malaysia is starting to set up wafer capabilities, this is an add on when the country is already the largest producer of clean room gloves which are used in the semiconductor assembly and testing stages
This is not a one-year story but a multi-year balance-of-payments adjustment.
2. The Productivity and Income Gap Is Narrowing
For decades, the relative strength of the Singapore dollar reflected a widening productivity and income gap between Singapore and Malaysia. That gap is now narrowing rather than widening.
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Malaysian wages are rising faster than Singapore’s, supporting stronger domestic consumption
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Higher-value manufacturing and services are expanding within Malaysia
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Talent retention and skilled labor participation are improving
Currencies ultimately reflect relative productivity trends, not historical reputation. As Malaysia’s economic fundamentals converge toward those of higher-income peers, the exchange rate must adjust accordingly.
3. Property and Capital Inflows Signal Confidence, Not Speculation
Kuala Lumpur — particularly areas such as KLCC — is experiencing a strong property upswing, with substantial foreign capital inflows.
This is not purely speculative activity. It reflects:
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Improved investor confidence
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Greater institutional participation
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A reassessment of Malaysia’s long-term economic trajectory
These inflows reinforce demand for the ringgit and strengthen the currency’s medium-term outlook.
4. Improved Governance and Investor Sentiment
Underlying these trends is renewed confidence in Malaysia’s current government, driven by clearer policy direction, better governance signals, and a more credible reform narrative.
Investor confidence matters. When capital believes in policy continuity and economic management, currency appreciation tends to be persistent rather than temporary.
The Bottom Line
The appreciation of the ringgit is likely to continue over the next two years, driven by sustained capital inflows, improving economic fundamentals, and rising investor confidence. On this trajectory, one Singapore dollar could trade near 2.85 ringgit within the end of next year.
If the upcoming Malaysian general election results in the current incumbent government remaining in power, policy continuity and reform momentum would further reinforce confidence in the Malaysian economy. Under such conditions, the uncomfortable truth for many investors is that the ringgit is likely to continue appreciating at approximately 5% per annum with possibility of 2.2 Ringgit mark in 2034. This will mark a clear change of the Malaysia Ringgit being known as a weak currency