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View all search resultsThe benchmark IDX Composite index fell around 1.4 percent during the first trading session on Wednesday, although this was on a par with the declines recorded for Nikkei and KOSPI in the same period.
An electronic display board inside the main hall of the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) in South Jakarta shows an overall downward movement across most stocks during the lunch break on Jan. 29, 2026, when the IDX Composite index fell 6.3 percent after global investment firm MSCI raised concerns about free float and trading transparency. (TJP/Deni Ghifari)
&P Dow Jones Indices (DJI) has put Indonesia on a watch list for a potential downgrade to frontier market status in its next annual review in 2027.
The New York-based global index provider issued the warning in an announcement on Tuesday, adding it was continuing to monitor developments related to stock ownership transparency and guidance from the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) to address disclosure-related concerns and potential liquidity impact in the country.
“If circumstances worsen, S&P DJI may consider implementing special treatment for Indonesian securities,” reads the announcement.
The index provider added that if these matters remained unresolved one calendar year from the date that special measures were introduced, Indonesia’s market classification was set to be assessed at the 2027 annual review.
In response, newly appointed IDX president director Jeffrey Hendrik said in a statement on Wednesday that the exchange would conduct “constructive communications and discussions” with S&P DJI to understand its concerns and evaluations.
“Together with the OJK [Financial Services Authority] and all stakeholders, IDX will continue to take various measures to address existing concerns. The exchange is committed to taking various efforts to improve transparency and ensure a fair, orderly and efficient capital market,” he said.
Read also: MSCI still has gripes with Indonesian stock market transparency
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