A Malaysian man has paid 200,000 ringgit (US$54,300) for a car licence plate bearing his surname, the highest bid in the country for such an item, an official and news reports said on Friday.
The “TAN” licence plate went to an ethnic Chinese businessman, identified only as Tan, The Star newspaper said, quoting Road Transport Department director-general Emran Kadir.
An official at the department’s Kuala Lumpur office, who requested anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media, confirmed the bid.
The Star quoted Emran as saying the three-letter combination in the licence plate was followed by a single digit, which further increased the value of the plate. The report did not say what the number was.
The first letter on a number plate indicates the state that issues it, and the successful bidder obtained it from Terengganu state. The bidder is not a native of the state, The Star said.
The previous record was set when 166,000 ringgit (US$45,050) was paid for a plate reading “JJJ1.”
Tan is a common surname among Malaysia’s minority ethnic Chinese, who make up a quarter of the nation’s 26 million citizens.
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