
Phison's newly launched MaiStorage Technology eyes IPO in 2028
PUTRAJAYA: Phison Electronics Corporation's newly launched subsidiary MaiStorage Technology Sdn Bhd is eyeing an initial public offering (IPO) in 2028 to support expansion and to retain talent.
Founder and group CEO Datuk Pua Khein Seng said the capital it raises from the IPO will be used to build the company's own research and development (R&D) centre.
'We are currently renting an office from the Selangor state government, which can accommodate about 200 to 250 people. As we continue to grow, we'll need to secure land and construct a custom-built R&D facility. That's what the IPO capital will mainly fund,' he said at a press conference after the official launch of MaiStorage Technology by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim today.
MaiStorage plans to build and expand its integrated circuit (IC) design team focused on NAND flash controller chip design – a critical component of modern storage and computing systems.
Pua said since starting operations in August 2024, the Phison-backed company has trained 60 local IC design engineers and is on track to train 175 by 2026. 'We are working very closely with TalentCorp to train another 150 engineers over the next three years,' he added.
He stressed that these are real, capable IC design engineers, not factory operators.
'So how do we retain engineers? The only way is through an IPO. That's what I've learned from Taiwan's Hsinchu Science Park, as well as from Shenzhen, Shanghai, and Beijing,' Pua said.
'That's why we've launched a three-year programme to take MaiStorage public on the Malaysian stock exchange by 2028.'
However, Pua said the business operates with internal capital from 'cash rich' Phison and is not dependent on external fundraising for growth.
'By the end of CQ1, overall the company, our investment was RM100 million. Now the net value is over RM100 million. So we earn like around RM4 million already.'
Furthermore, the company aims to position Malaysia as a technology hub in Asia.
'We have a partner from Thailand coming in to work with us on licensing and transferring our AI technology to Thailand. Every government wants on-premises AI. Cloud is good, but it's expensive and compromises data privacy,' Pua said.
He added that there is also a knowledge gap.
'We brought in the technology, trained the trainers here, and now they are building their own ecosystem to train students and IT managers.'
Pua sees this training-and-ecosystem model as a replicable export. 'This model will first be exported to Thailand, and hopefully, we can expand it to the Middle East as well.'
MaiStorage is an IC design and storage technology provider that caters to the data centre, AI applications and the automotive industries in Malaysia. It offers SSD solutions and aiDAPTIV+ AI LLM training and fine-tuning platform on-premises to enhance performance, security, and AI-driven innovations for customers.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Focus Malaysia
18 minutes ago
- Focus Malaysia
MCA baffled by PMX's claim of RM20b national debt cut when it has surged 11.4% under Madani rule
PRIME Minister and Finance Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim must stop using selective framing and misrepresenting concepts to downplay the seriousness of the national debt situation or to claim undue credit. The public deserves transparency, particularly in the face of rising inflation, a soaring cost of living and growing economic hardship. What is urgently needed are concrete, revenue-generating economic policies, not a continued dependence on tax increases and subsidy reductions that place additional financial pressure on the rakyat. Recently, PMX stated that Malaysia's new borrowings have decreased annually from RM100 bil in 2022 to RM80 bil in 2024. He also claimed that consistent efforts have been made since 2022 to reduce the fiscal deficit from 5.5% to a projected 3.8% this year. However, such narrative attempts to obscure the actual increase in overall national debt by focusing only on the decline in new borrowing. Borrowing drops bit debt level surges The claim of a RM20 bil drop in new debt over three years does not reflect the full picture. According to the latest fiscal and debt data released by Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM), the national debt continues to rise. Official reports such as the Government Finance Statistics and the Economic Outlook Report show that federal government debt exceeded RM1.17 tril as of end-2023. This figure rose to RM1.63 tril in 2024 and remained high at RM1.25 tril as of 1Q 2025. These numbers directly contradict PMX's claims and reveal a clear attempt to present a misleading version of the national debt status by selectively using statistics. National debt cannot be assessed by focusing solely on new borrowings. The total size of the debt, the debt-to-GDP ratio, re-financing obligations and interest liabilities are all key structural factors that must be addressed. Suggesting that borrowing slightly less this year indicates meaningful fiscal improvement underestimates the public's understanding and concern. Self-deception What matters most to the people is the actual debt burden carried by the country – not how the government chooses to interpret the data. If the debt continues to grow and interest payments increase, then PMX's remarks amount to self-deception and risk eroding public trust. Perdana Menteri Anwar Ibrahim berkata kerajaan berjaya mengurangkan jumlah hutang negara sebanyak RM20 bilion sejak mengambil alih pentadbiran pada tahun 2022. Beliau yang juga menteri kewangan berkata bermula dengan hutang berjumlah RM100 bilion, kerajaan kini menyasarkan… — Malaysiakini (BM) (@mkini_bm) June 20, 2025 Editor's Note: Kindly read comments by man-on-the-street Malaysians to the Malaysiakini post. Despite repeated assurances of fiscal reform and financial discipline, the Madani government has yet to demonstrate genuine progress in reducing national debt or budget deficits over the past two years. Instead, it has expanded the Sales and Services Tax (SST) and reduced subsidies, effectively shifting the fiscal burden onto the public while failing to rein in government expenditure. Balancing the national budget should not come at the expense of ordinary Malaysians. The real crisis today lies in inflation and the rising cost of living. Yet the government has failed to introduce any substantial, revenue-boosting economic policy or reform plan. What the country truly needs are forward-looking policies that raise incomes, encourage investment and create employment opportunities. Fiscal reforms must not be used as an excuse to add to the public's burden. Malaysians do not need more political packaging. What is urgently required are real, effective solutions that provide relief and restore confidence. – June 22, 2025 A PhD holder in theoretical economics from the Perking University and a business development actuary, Saw Yee Fung is the MCA Youth secretary general. The views expressed are solely of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Focus Malaysia.


New Straits Times
2 hours ago
- New Straits Times
MONEY THOUGHTS: A practical blueprint for modest wealth
This is our current reality: United States President Donald Trump's asinine trade tariff tantrum will make life tougher for both Americans and the rest of the world, because the economic friction introduced by his tariffs will lower Earth's potential aggregate economic growth. The reduction will make life less palatable for most of Earth's 8.2 billion people. Thankfully, there are ways for regular people to restructure their finances to benefit from the economic and capital market volatility stemming from bad policies gushing out from the once-respected White House like a high-pressure stream of raw sewage. In April, Forbes magazine released its 39th annual World's Billionaires list. It unearthed a record number of 3,028 billionaires with an aggregate net worth of US$16.1 trillion. The mean net worth of those 3,000-plus super-wealthy men and women this year: US$5.3 billion. The world's first billionaire was oilman John Davison Rockefeller — later referred to as John D. Rockefeller Sr when his son John D. Rockefeller Jr was born. JDR Sr became a billionaire in 1916 at the age of 77. To their credit, he and his progeny nurtured a culture of philanthropy that benefitted millions over many decades. JDR Sr died in 1937 at the age of 97 years and 10 months. Five years before his demise, in writer John Thomas Flynn's book God's Gold: The Story of Rockefeller and His Times, JDR Sr is quoted saying: "I believe the power to make money is a gift from God — just as the instincts for art, music, literature, the doctor's talent, the nurse's, yours — to be developed and used to the best of our ability for the good of mankind. "Having been endowed with the gift I possess, I believe it is my duty to make money and still more money; and to use the money I make for the good of my fellow man according to the dictates of my conscience." I find that almost century-old statement of mission and intent (from 1932) inspiring. LESSONS AND PRINCIPLES I recognise it is unlikely any of Earth's current crop of 3,028 billionaires will read this Money Thoughts column, including the 19 of them who are Malaysians with average net worths of about US$3 billion or RM12.7 billion. I probably don't have anything of value to share with those super-elite individuals who account for 0.000037 per cent of all living humans. However — and this I know from decades of client interactions — when it comes to attaining modest levels of wealth, say in the much lower RM100,000 to RM10 million range, I do have viable lessons and principles to share with many people. Toward that end, there is a multi-part blueprint which I'm happy to share with ambitious readers. Note: Meaningful levels of domestic, regional, and global philanthropy can be achieved by the many millions of people worldwide who are capable of building wealth levels in the range of RM100,000 to RM10 million. So, to help such individuals, I've been laying the foundation of this blueprint over several weeks. Here it is: 1. Recognise the value of two distinct processes; 2. Embrace high market volatility as a long-term aid to wealth-building; 3. Harness a logical long-term investment strategy; and 4. Use a readily available banking facility to put your plan on autopilot. Allow me to elaborate: 1. The Two Processes The six-step financial planning process and a logical three-part wealth-building process can be of use to almost all adults of sound mind. Read that recent Money Thoughts column for a rundown of both processes. Do take note of the second process, which comprises one principle, one strategy and one system. Each of which will be sequentially covered below to provide you — hopefully — with a robust framework to build future wealth for your family, most likely within the target range of RM100,000 to RM10 million. 2. Volatility's hidden value In both business and investing, the most straightforward way to make money is to buy low, and sell high. It is a powerful principle. When we understand this unchanging economic truth, we can begin looking upon asset price volatility as a beneficial wealth-building mechanism. Elaboration: 3. Understand dollar-cost averaging Unfortunately, a mere cerebral acceptance of the validity of buying low and selling high is useless unless we can also implement a disciplined strategy to do so consistently. The dollar-cost averaging (DCA) fits the bill. Perfectly. 4. Rely on standing instructions Finally, even after we reach the point of understanding that it is economically beneficial to implement a personal DCA strategy when aiming to build lifelong wealth, we still need a pragmatic system to automatically and emotionlessly implement that strategy. The system I recommend hinges on bank Standing Instructions that regularly shunt cash out of our bank account into, ideally, a diversified savings and investment portfolio for decades on end. Digesting all the material in today's column requires time and attention. I know most readers won't embark on the full journey, but the minority that does will prosper; and in all likelihood, bigtime. © 2025 Rajen Devadason


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
M'sian customer frustrated after delivery rider allegedly demands tip
TIPPING culture is generally not practised in Malaysia, unlike in countries such as the United States, which is why Malaysians are generally not obliged to tip. The issue of tipping was recently highlighted in a Threads post after a Malaysian customer alleged that a delivery rider had requested a tip. The request did not sit well with the customer, who wrote in their post: 'Has Western culture reached Malaysia already? I give tips when I want to. I don't like being asked to do so.' The post sparked discussion about whether one is obligated to tip service workers — especially when a tip is explicitly requested. Meanwhile, others encouraged the customer to report the delivery rider to the company, pointing out that the delivery fee had already been paid. 'In the United States, customers have to tip because there is no service charge there. But in Malaysia, self-service shops can impose a service charge, which is unfortunate,' one user noted. 'Their income comes from their salary, not tips. We understand that tipping is an act of gratitude, but we don't want it to become a norm or something expected. Regardless of whether they receive a tip or not, they should still perform their duties. We're not just paying for the food — we're also paying a service charge. And with food delivery, we're already paying a delivery charge,' another user commented.