• Home
  • News
    • Press Statements
    • Speeches
    • Bar News
    • AGMs and EGMs
    • In Memoriam
    • Legal and General News
    • Court Judgments
    • Highlights from the Appellate Courts
  • Members
    • Circulars
    • Peer Support Network
    • Sijil Annual and Payments
    • Benefits
    • Practice Management
    • Professional Development
    • Opportunities for Practice
    • Mentor-Mentee Programmes
    • Laws, BC Rulings and Practice Directions
    • Resources
    • Become a Member
  • Find
    • Legal Directories
    • BC Legal Aid Centres
    • State Bar Committees
    • Law Firms | Areas of Practice
    • Jobs
    • Useful Forms
  • About Us
    • Malaysian Bar and Bar Council
    • President's Corner
    • Committees
    • Previous Committees
    • Contacts
    • Advertising
    • Malaysian Bar Lifetime Achievement Award
  • Public
    • Notices
    • Compensation Fund
    • Complaints
    • Legal Aid
    • MyBar Pro Bono Hub
  • Search
  • Login
Search for

New login method: If first-time login, the password is your NRIC No. Call 20502191 for help.

 
Lost your password? Remember Me

 
No User ID/Password for firm? Click here for more information. Forgot Firm Username/Password?

Set a new password

If you have lost your password, you must set a new password. To begin this process, please key in your 12-digit NRIC No. below.

Forgot Firm Username/ Password?

Please enter name of firm or registered email address, indicate whether you want to retrieve your firm's username or password, and click "Submit".

Username Password
 
Access to Member Portal

Please key in your membership number, and click "GO"

BC
Resume Practice Request

Please key in your membership number, and click "GO"

BC
Newly-Called Request

Please key in your pupil code, and click "Submit"

Pupil Code

Change Password


Please enter your Password and Confirm Password then click on the Change Password button.
You will receive a new password shortly. Use this new password to access the site.

Password:
Confirm Password:
 
Change Password


Shortcut
  • Legal Directory
  • Find a Job
  • CPD
  • Online Shop
  • Payments
  • Complaints
  • Committees

Search the site

  • Search Me
Member Login
  • BC Online Facilities
  • Login Type 2
  • Login Type 3
  • Login Type 4
  • About Us
  • President's Corner
  • Press Statements
About Us
Malaysian Bar and Bar Council
  • About Us
  • Bar Council Members
  • Malaysian Bar Secretariat
  • Elections
President's Corner
  • Roll of Chairmen / Presidents
  • Press Statements
Committees
  • * Committees | Introduction
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Conditional Fee Rules (Re Non-Personal Injuries)
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Conditional Fee Rules (Re Personal Injuries)
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Contempt of Court
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Corporatisation of Law Firms and Multi-Disciplinary Practice
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Legal Services Blueprint
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Personal Data Protection
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Prison Reforms
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Sectoral Law and Practice Integration
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Sectoral Law and Practice Integration
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Statelessness
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Touting
  • Ad Hoc Pandemic Response
  • Ad Hoc Parliament Liaison Committee
  • Ad Hoc Peer Support Network
  • Ad Hoc Waqf Committee
  • Advocacy Training
  • AMLA Training Committee
  • Animal Rights Committee
  • Anti-Touting Committee
  • Arbitration
  • Art and Law Committee
  • Bahasa Melayu
  • Building
  • Child Rights
  • Civil Law and Law Reform Committee
  • Committee on AMLA
  • Committee on Orang Asli Rights
  • Committee on Persons with Disabilities
  • Committee on Reform to the Legal Sector
  • Constitutional Law Committee
  • Construction Law
  • Conveyancing Practice
  • Corporate and Commercial Law
  • Court Liaison
  • Criminal Law
  • Cyber and Privacy Laws Committee
  • Cyberlaw
  • Digital and Communications Committee
  • Enforcement Committee
  • Environment and Climate Change
  • Family Law
  • Finance
  • Human Rights
  • Industrial and Employment Law
  • INSAF Committee
  • Integration
  • Intellectual Property
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2026 Organising Committee
  • International Policy and Practice Committee
  • Islamic Finance
  • Joint Committee on Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”)
  • Joint Working Committee on ELEVATE
  • Joint Working Task Force to Reform the Healthcare Dispute Resolution System
  • Law Reform and Special Areas
  • LAWASIA Conference 2024 Organising Committee
  • LawCare
  • Legal Databases Liaison
  • Legal Profession
  • Legal Profession Practical Course Committee
  • Legal Tech, AI and Sandbox Committee
  • Mediation
  • Migrants, Refugees and Immigration Affairs Committee
  • MyBar Academy
  • MyBar Ageing Rights Advisory ("MBARA") Committee
  • MyBar Carnival Organising Committee
  • National Legal Aid Committee
  • National Young Lawyers and Pupils Committee
  • Personal Injury Claims and Awards
  • Professional Indemnity Insurance Committee
  • Professional Standards and Development
  • Publications
  • Risk Management
  • Shipping and Admiralty Law
  • Small Firms Practice
  • Solicitors' Remuneration Enforcement
  • Sports
  • Sports and e-Sports Law Practice Committee
  • Strategic Litigation Committee
  • Syariah Court Liaison Committee
  • Syariah Law
  • Task Force on Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission ("IPCMC") and Police Accountability
  • Tax and Customs Committee
  • Tender Review Committee
  • Trade in Legal Services Committee
  • Trade in Legal Services Committee
  • Women's Rights
  • Yayasan Bantuan Guaman Kebangsaan Committee
Previous Committees
  • * Previous Committees | Introduction
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Amendments to the LPA
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Anti-Money Laundering
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Benchmarking Law Firms
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Judicial Commission
  • Ad Hoc Committee On National Legal Aid Foundation
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Quality and Standards
  • Ad Hoc Committee on Rules and Regulations
  • Alternative Dispute Resolution
  • Gender Issues & Equal Opportunities (2005-2007)
  • Institutional and Law Reform
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2012
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2014
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2016
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2018
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2020
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2022
  • International Malaysia Law Conference 2023
  • LawCare Fund Management
  • Library
  • Malaysian Law Conference 2007
  • Malaysian Law Conference 2010
  • Motor Insurance Review Ad Hoc Committee
  • No-Fault Liability Scheme
  • Practice Management Support
  • Safer Malaysia
  • Standing Committee for the Promotion of Best Practices by Detaining Authorities (2005-2007)
  • Standing Committee on Court Rules (2005-2007)
  • Standing Committee on Eliminating Discrimination (2005-2007)
  • Standing Committee to Review LPA 1976
  • Study Loan
  • Task Force on Combined Rules of Court
  • Task Force to Review the Compendium of Personal Injury Awards
Contacts
  • Web Administrator
  • Complaints
  • Legal Aid Centres
  • State Bar Committees
  • Malaysian Bar Secretariat
  • Bar Council Members
  • Bar Council
Advertising
  • Advertise with Bar Council
Malaysian Bar Lifetime Achievement Award
  • Malaysian Bar Lifetime Achievement Award
  • Go back to list
Press Release | Third-Party Funding, Arbitral Integrity and Lessons from Recent International Arbitration Developments 13 Jan 2026 9:35 am

The Malaysian Bar recognises that third-party funding has become an established feature of modern international arbitration.  When properly regulated, it can enhance access to justice, allow meritorious claims to be pursued despite financial constraints and strengthen confidence in arbitration as a credible and feasible dispute resolution mechanism.

The Parliament’s enactment of the Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024, which came into force on 1 January 2026, reflects a conscious policy choice to legitimise third-party funding in arbitration while embedding safeguards intended to preserve ethical standards, procedural fairness and the integrity of the arbitral process.  The statutory abolition of the common law rule against maintenance and champerty for arbitration, coupled with mandatory disclosure obligations and the introduction of a code of practice for third-party funding, demonstrates a balanced approach that accepts funding as a reality but subjects it to transparency and oversight.

Recent international arbitration developments, including high-profile investor-state disputes, have prompted public debate on whether third-party funding encourages speculative or abusive claims.  The Malaysian Bar is of the view that such cases do not establish that funding itself is unethical or improper.  Rather, they highlight the risks that arise where funding operates in an environment that lacks clear disclosure requirements, effective tribunal oversight or early scrutiny of jurisdictional and procedural issues.

Third-party funding does not create weak claims.  It can, however, expand the scope of disputes and prolong proceedings if underlying jurisdictional or procedural weaknesses are not identified and addressed promptly.  The ethical concern, therefore, lies not in the existence of funding, but in the absence of robust institutional checks to ensure independence of arbitral decision-making, manage conflicts of interest, and prevent undue influence over the conduct of proceedings.

The Malaysian framework addresses these concerns directly.  Mandatory disclosure of the existence and identity of funders promotes transparency, allowing arbitrators to assess potential conflicts at an early stage.  The code of practice provides a structured mechanism to regulate funder conduct, including issues of capital adequacy and control over proceedings.  It does so while preserving flexibility for tribunals to respond proportionately through procedural directions, including orders for security for costs, adverse costs orders, or other appropriate procedural sanctions, in instances of non-compliance.  The new framework also reinforces the principle that funders must not direct the conduct of the arbitration, including decisions on strategy, evidence or settlement, and that counsel’s professional duties remain owed exclusively to the client and the tribunal.

The Malaysian Bar emphasises that arbitration derives its legitimacy from fairness, neutrality and respect for the rule of law.  Third-party funding must operate within these boundaries.  When used responsibly and regulated effectively, it supports access to justice and reinforces confidence in arbitration.  However, when used without transparency or accountability, it risks undermining the very system it seeks to support.

The Malaysian Bar recognises that the effectiveness of this framework will ultimately depend on consistent enforcement, judicial support and principled application by arbitral tribunals.  Ongoing vigilance by all stakeholders will therefore be essential to ensure that the objectives of transparency, fairness and integrity are realised in practice.

The Malaysian Bar, therefore, supports the new statutory framework governing third-party funding in arbitration and calls on all stakeholders, including counsel, funders, arbitrators and institutions, to uphold both the letter and the spirit of the law.  Ethical funding, grounded in transparency and disciplined by oversight, is not a threat to arbitration.  It is a tool that must be handled with care, integrity, and responsibility.

Mohamad Ezri b Abdul Wahab
President
Malaysian Bar

13 January 2026

© Copyright Reserved 2026. Malaysian Bar.
Wisma Badan Peguam Malaysia, 2 Leboh Pasar Besar, 50050 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Terms and Conditions.
 

I'm a

 
 
 
 
 

I'm a