Indonesian stocks get MSCI reprieve but clock ticks on market reforms


FILE PHOTO: Stock market information displayed at the lobby of the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) in Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday, Jan 30, 2026. -- Bloomberg

SINGAPORE: A five-month extension to index provider MSCI's review of Indonesian equities gives Jakarta regulators a longer runway for reforms, but will not immediately lure long-term capital back to the battered market, investors say.

The benchmark index fell 1.6% after MSCI pushed its review to November, deferring rather than eliminating the downgrade threat, with the country retaining its emerging market status for now.

Indonesian assets have been hammered since January, when MSCI froze the country's stocks in its indexes and raised the prospect of a downgrade to frontier status, leading to a flurry of reforms, including moves to raise free-float levels.

The index is down 30% so far this year, making it the world's worst-performing major stock market, as overseas investors net sold around $3.9 billion worth of shares.

With foreign outflows unrelenting and fiscal worries dragging the rupiah to record lows, the window of opportunity is narrow to turn around a market that has gone from darling to deadweight.

Tan Altundag, investment manager for emerging equities at Pictet Asset Management, said staying in the investable universe for a broader range of funds is meaningful, but "it does not automatically restore confidence or reverse outflows."

"This is not a clear-cut recovery narrative, and the bar for re-engagement remains high," said Altundag, who is underweight Indonesia.

STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

The index provider late on Tuesday called measures from Jakarta a "step in the right direction", but warned it would consider options such as a consultation on a downgrade if sufficient progress was not evident by November.

Gary Tan, portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments, said the outcome was in line with market expectations, with the tone of MSCI’s statement more cautionary than outright negative.

"What stood out is the clear shift toward implementation and measurable outcomes, signalling that announced reforms alone are not sufficient," Tan said.

"The extension of the review to November keeps pressure on regulators and effectively kicks the decision down the road."

Indonesia's financial regulator said on Wednesday the MSCI announcement would serve as momentum to strengthen and accelerate the capital market reform agendas initiated since January.

For passive emerging market funds and ETFs, the impact is likely to be limited, said Kunhee Park, investment strategist for ETF equities at State Street Investment Management, noting Indonesia's weight in the MSCI emerging markets index has already more than halved this year to less than 0.5%.

Investor unease has been growing over President Prabowo Subianto's spending agenda, which has supported initiatives such as free meals to millions of people but has also contributed to the rupiah sliding to record lows, leaving the broader investment backdrop looking fragile.

Credit-rating firms Moody's and Fitch cut their debt rating outlooks for Indonesia to negative earlier this year, citing reduced policymaking credibility.

A downgrade would be devastating for Indonesia and could trigger as much as $13 billion in outflows from the equity market, Goldman Sachs has estimated, at a time when the combined market value of Indonesian equities has shrunk by $370 billion since January.

Mohit Mirpuri, a Singapore-based fund manager at SGMC Capital, said the MSCI extension is a better outcome than many had feared, but stressed that the onus is now on Indonesian regulators.

"The next few months will be about execution, credibility and evidence rather than further policy announcements," he said. - Reuters

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