Company: VCIG
Filing Date: 2025-10-31
Form Type: 424B5
Source: 0001213900-25-104595
Chunk: 56

Company: VCI Global Ltd
Filing Date: 2025-10-31
Form: 424B5
Chunk 56
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assurance that we will declare dividends of any amounts, at any rate or at all in the future. Future dividends, if any, will be at the
discretion of our Board of Directors, and will depend upon our results of operations, cash flows, financial condition, payment to us of
cash dividends by our subsidiaries, capital needs, future prospects and other factors that our directors may deem appropriate.

As the rights of shareholders under British Virgin Islands law differ from those under U.S. law, you may have fewer protections as a shareholder.

Our corporate affairs will be governed by our
memorandum and articles of association, the BVI Business Companies Act, 2004 (as amended), referred to below as the “BVI Act”,
and the common law of the British Virgin Islands. The rights of shareholders to take legal action against our directors, actions by minority
shareholders and the fiduciary responsibilities of our directors under British Virgin Islands law are governed by the BVI Act and the
common law of the British Virgin Islands. The common law of the British Virgin Islands is derived in part from comparatively limited judicial
precedent in the British Virgin Islands as well as from the common law of England and the wider Commonwealth, which has persuasive, but
not binding, authority on a court in the British Virgin Islands. The rights of our shareholders and the fiduciary responsibilities of
our directors under British Virgin Islands law are largely codified in the BVI Act, but are potentially not as clearly established as
they would be under statutes or judicial precedents in some jurisdictions in the United States. In particular, the British Virgin Islands
has a less developed body of securities laws as compared to the United States, and some states (such as Delaware) have more fully developed
and judicially interpreted bodies of corporate law. As a result of all the above, holders of our shares may have more difficulty in protecting
their interests through actions against our management, directors or major shareholders than they would as shareholders of a U.S. company.

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British Virgin Islands companies may not be able to initiate shareholder derivative actions, thereby depriving shareholders of the ability to protect their interests.

Shareholders of British Virgin Islands companies
may not have standing to initiate a shareholder derivative action in a federal court of the United States. Shareholders of a British Virgin
Islands company could, however, bring a derivative action in the British Virgin Islands courts, and there is a clear statutory right to
commence such derivative