Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT...

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Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development Jakarta - Indonesia [email protected] and [email protected] Financial Evolution, Regulatery Reforn and Cooperation in Asia Seoul National University – 17-18 May 2013

Transcript of Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT...

Page 1: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia

Hendri Saparini, PhD

CORE InstituteECONIT Advisory Group

Independent tink tank in Economic DevelopmentJakarta - Indonesia

[email protected] and [email protected]

Financial Evolution, Regulatery Reforn and Cooperation in AsiaSeoul National University – 17-18 May 2013

Page 2: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Outline

• Indonesian Financial Structure• Regulation in Financial Sectors• Roles of banking sector in economy• Roles of capital market in economy

Page 3: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

1. Indonesian Financial Structure

• Dominated by banking sector

• Banking regulation has changed over the New Order to Reformation Era

• Increasing foreign ownership in banking sector after the liberalisation of banking regulation

Page 4: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Asset Composition of Finance CompaniesBanking industry dominates Indonesian financial system

Commercial

Banks; 75.2

Insurance Companies; 9.9

Finance Companies;

6.2

Mutual Funds; 3.3

Pension Funds; 2.7Rural Banks; 1.2Securities Companies; 0.8Pawn Brokers;

0.600000000000001Venture Capital Firms; 0.1 Loan Companies; 0.1

* March 2012

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 5: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Total Number of Financial Institutions‘Out-spread’ banks

Type of Institution June 2012

Commercial Banks 120

Rural Banks 1,667

Insurance Companies* 139

Pension Funds* 271

Finance Companies 197

Venture Capital Firms 89

Securities Companies* 119

Mutual Funds* 685

Loan Companies 4

Pawn Brokers 1

* December 2011

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 6: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Regulating and Supervising Body The establishment of OJK (Financial Service Authority) - 2012

Bank Indonesia(Central Bank)

Banking regulation & supervision

Monetary, Payment Systems & Foreign

Exchange

Bapepam-LK under MOF

Capital MarketNon Bank Financial

Institutions*

Bank Indonesia

Macro Prudential Regulation

Monetary, Payment

Systems & Foreign

Exchange

Financial Service Authority

Banking regulation & supervision

Capital MarketNon Bank Financial

Institutions

*NBFI includes Pension, Insurance, Finance Companies, Venture Capital, Guarantee Companies

Page 7: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Phases of Indonesia financial developmentStill consolidating?

(1966-72)formative

period

(1973-82) policy-based

finance period under soaring oil

prices

(1983-91) financial-

reform period

(1992-97) period of expansion

(1998-2004) financial

restructuring

(2004-now)period of

consolidation

Source: Hamada (2003) dengan tambahan

Page 8: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Time-line of Number of banks in Indonesia From over-regulated to consolidation after liberalization

Financial reform

(deregulation)

consolidationrestructurisation

Source: Bank Indonesia

1967

1969

1971

1973

1975

1977

1979

1981

1983

1985

1987

1989

1991

1993

1995

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

0

50

100

150

200

250

State Owned Banks National Private BanksRegional Development Banks Joint Venture & Foreign Owned Banks

formative period Policy-based finance period

expansion

Page 9: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Ownership of Banks Restriction in Asia vs. liberalisation in Indonesia

Country Maximum Foreign Ownership (%)

China 20

Malaysia 30

Vietnam 30

Pakistan 49

Thailand 49

Philippines 60

India 74

Indonesia 99

Australia, Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, South Korea

Not limited, but highly regulated

http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/08/02/idINIndia-58571120110802

Page 10: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Big Banks Domination in IndonesiaTen banks hold 65% of national banking assets

*Data Desember 2012 kecuali Bank Panin Sept. 2012**Bank BUMN (38%) & 6 bank swasta (27% )

Source: Laporan Keuangan Perusahaan2

No BankAsset

(triliun Rupiah)

Majority ShareholderComposition

(%)

1 Bank Mandiri 635,6 • Government 60,00

2 BRI 551,3 • Government 56,75

3 BCA 442,99 • FarIndo Investments Ltd (Mauritius) 47,15

4 BNI 333,3 • Government 60,00

5 CIMB Niaga 192,7 • CIMB Group Sdn Berhad (Malaysia)• Santubong Investment Sdn Berhad

(Malaysia)

56,116,65

6 Bank Danamon 141,93 • Asia Financial (Indonesia) Pte Ltd---Fullerton Financial Holdings ---Temasek

67,37

7 Panin Bank 133,71 • PT Panin Financial Tbk• Potrayn No 1103 Pty Ltd---ANZ Banking

Group (Australia)

45,4638,82

8 Permata Bank 131,80 • Standard Chartered Bank (UK)• PT Astra International Tbk

44,5644,56

9 Bank BII 115.77 • Sorak Financial Holdings Pte. Ltd---Mayban Offshore Corporate Service (Malaysia)

• Mayban Offshore Corporate Service (Labuan) Sdn. Bhd

54,3342,96

10 BTN 111.75 • Government 61,35

Total 2764.95

Page 11: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Further Banking Regulation Indonesia ready for Basel III Regulation in 2019

Requirements Under Basel II Under Basel III

Minimum Ratio of Total Capital To RWAs* 8% 10.50%Minimum Ratio of Common Equity to RWAs 2% 4.50% to 7.00%

Tier I capital to RWAs 4% 6.00%

Core Tier I capital to RWAs 2% 5.00%

Capital Conservation Buffers to RWAs - 2.50%

Leverage Ratio - 3.00%

Countercyclical Buffer - 0% to 2.50%

Minimum Liquidity Coverage Ratio - TBD (2015)

Minimum Net Stable Funding Ratio - TBD (2018)Systemically important Financial Institutions Charge - TBD (2011)

Indicator 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Capital Adequacy Ratio (%) 16.76 17.42 17.18 16.05 17.43

Return On Assets Ratio (%) 2.33 2.60 2.86 3.03 3.11

Loan to Deposits Ratio (%) 74.58 72.88 75.21 78.77 83.58

Operating Expenses/Operating Income (%)

88.59 86.63 86.14 85.42 74.10

Indonesia Banks Performance* Risk Weighted Assets

Page 12: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

2. Limited Role of Banking Sector in Economic Development

• Poor policy of monetary authority in managing interest rates

• High interest rate of loan has restricted public access to banks

• Indonesia national banking tends to take the capitalists side than the whole economic development

Page 13: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Monetary Policy Transmission MechanismAimed at inflation rate management?

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 14: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

BI rate & loan rateUnable to induce loan rate to lower level

Jan-05 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13-

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

12.00

14.00

16.00

18.00

20.00

Working Capital Loan, 11.45 Investment Loan,

11.27

Consumer Loan, 13.22

BI Rate 5.75

Time Deposit 6 month 6.10

Perc

ent

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 15: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Headline Inflation Rate (yoy, %)Still high, but went lower

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

-2.00

0.00

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

12.00

14.00

PRC 2.64

Indonesia 4.28

South Korea 2.18Malaysia 1.66

Philippines 3.13Thailand 3.01

Source: World Bank

Page 16: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Lending interest rate, 2010Indonesia, the highest among some Asian countries

Malaysia Singapore Korea, Rep. China Thailand India Indonesia0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

8.0

10.0

12.0

14.0

4.95.4

5.8

6.66.9

10.2

12.4

%

Source: World Bank

Page 17: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Net Interest MarginIndonesia also the highest among ASEAN countries

Singapore Malaysia Thailand Phippines Indonesia0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

2

2.8

3.43.7

7.5

1.9

2.7

3.3 3.4

7.1

1.8

2.6

3.13.3

6.6

2010 2011 2012E

%

Source: Maybank Kim Eng, 2013

Page 18: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Fee Based Income, 2011Poor creativity, relying on interest based income

Indonesia Philippines Malaysia Singapore Thailand0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

10%

12%

14%

20%21%

Source: Maybank Kim Eng, 2013

Page 19: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Limiting factors of investmentHigh interest rate, main obstacle for investment

tax5%

security5%

labor7%

regulation9%

acces to bank credit14%

administration17%

infrastructure18%

rate26%

Source: Bussiness Survey, Bank Indonesia, QIV-2012

Page 20: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.
Page 21: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Prime Lending RateWide gap of interest rates (microfinance vs. other loan)

Bank

Prime Lending Rate (%)*

Corporate Loan

Retail LoanMicrofinance

Loan

Consumer Loan

Housing Non Housing

Mandiri 10.00 12.00 22.00 10.75 12.00

BRI 9.75 11.75 19.25 10 12

BCA 9.25 10.60 N/A 9.50 8.18

BNI 10.00 11.60 11.60 10.65 12.25

CIMB Niaga 9.85 10.75 19.00 10.80 10.70

Danamon 10.00 11.00 19.76 11.75 12.49

*per 31 March 2013

Source: website perusahaan

Page 22: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Share of Loans to SMEs: Very Small The Number of SMEs is very huge

Bank Financing for SMEs

Type Kredit (Rp Triliun)

UMKM (Rp Triliun) Percent

State Owned Banks 961 245 25%

Commercial Banks 1,221 217 18%

Regional Development Banks 223 43 19%

Joint Venture Banks & Foreign Owned Banks 331 10 3%

Total 2,737 515 19%

Number of SMEs & Large Enterprises

*Feb. 2013

Micro53,207,500

99%

Small1%

Medium0% Large

4,8380%

*2010

Source: Bank Indonesia, BPS

Page 23: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Domestic Financing ProfileSources of business financing: mainly from internal source

Indonesia East Asia & Pasific

Internal Finance for Investment

88%

Bank Finance

for Investme

nt6%

Trade Credit Financing for Investment

1%

Equity, Sale of Stock For Investment

3%

Other Financing for Investment

1%

Internal Finance

for Investme

nt64%

Bank Finance for Investment

20%

Trade Credit

Financing for

Investment3%

Equity, Sale of Stock For Investment

6%Other Financing for

Investment8%

Source: Enterprise survey, World Bank, 2009

Page 24: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Percentage of firms with a bank loanOne of the Lowest in ASEAN

Timor-Leste (2009)

Indonesia (2009)

Cambodia (2007)

Lao PDR (2012)

Philippines (2009)

Vietnam (2009)

Malaysia (2007)

Thailand (2006)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

6.9

18.220.7

32.2 33.2

49.9

60.4

72.5

%

Source: World bank

Page 25: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

External Debt Outstanding

1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 20120

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

Government & Monetary Authority Private

Billions o

f U

SD

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 26: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Capital & Financial AccountGrew highly after 2008 crises

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012-30.0

-20.0

-10.0

0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

Current Account

Capital and Financial Account

Bil

lio

ns

of

US

$

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 27: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Domestic credit provided by banks*Banking roles in financing is the lowest

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

China

India

Indonesia

Korea

Malaysia

Philippines

Thailand

%

Source: World Bank*% of GDP

Page 28: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Rate of Return on Commercial Bank EquityIndonesian banking: the highest

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20100

5

10

15

20

25

30

Indonesia 26

Malaysia 16

Thailand 10

Singapore 16

Philipines 17

PRC 18

India 13

South Korea 7

%

Source: ADB

Page 29: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Component of Lending Rate Base Withheld by interests

Component Barrier

Cost of Loanable Fund

big depositors bargaining possition

Overhead Cost bank efficiency

Margin shareholders interest

Tax government regulation

Risk premium economy & politic stability

Page 30: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Charactersitics of Indonesian BankingDominated by big depositors over Rp. 5 billion

Classification of deposit

Number of Account (%)

Value (%)

N < 100M 97.59 15.64

100M < N < 500M 1.83 14.64

500M < N < 1B 0.3 8.43

1B < N < 5B 0.24 17.92

N > 5B 0.05 43.38

Total 100 100

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 31: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Banking Loans Distribution Mining grew highly, manufacture sector slower

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 20120

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

Mining and Quarrying

Manufacturing Industry

Electricity, Gas and Wa-ter Supply

ConstructionTrade, Hotel, and Restaurant

Transport and Com-munication

Financial, Ownership & Business Services

Index, 2002=

100

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 32: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Loan Distribution by SectorDecreasing loans to manufacture, increasing to trade sectors

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 20120%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Electricity, Gas and Water SupplyConstructionMining and QuarryingTransport and CommunicationAgriculture, Livestock, Forestry & FisheryServicesFinancial, Ownership & Business ServicesManufacturing IndustryTrade, Hotel, and Restaurant

Source: Bank Indonesia

Page 33: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

3. Limited role of capital market in financing

• Low attrectiveness of going-public from government and private enterprises

• Despite te fact of low attractiveness to go public, Indonesian capital market has highly performed, particularly in sectors with strong fundamental performance

• Foreign investment flow was still high as a result of high rate of return.

Page 34: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Market Capitalisation vs GDPLimited role of capital market to economy in Indonesia

Indonesia China India Philippines Thailand Korea, Rep.

Singapore Malaysia0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

46 4655

7478

89

129137

% o

f G

DP

Source: World Bank

*data tahun 2011

Page 35: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Number of listed companiesLess than 500 Indonesian companies go public

Philipp

ine

SE

Indo

nesia

SE

The

SE o

f Tha

iland

Sing

apor

e Ex

chan

ge

Bursa

Mal

aysia

Shan

ghai

SE

Shen

zhen

SE

Hong

Kong

Exc

hang

es

Natio

nal S

E In

dia

Kore

a Ex

chan

ge

Austra

lian

SE

Japa

n Ex

chan

ge G

roup

BSE In

dia

-

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

254 459 558

776 920 954

1,540 1,547 1,665 1,784 2,056

2,304

5,191

Source: World Federation of Exchanges

Data per 2012

Page 36: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Asia Growth IndexIHSG, the most expansive after 2008 crises

Jan-09 May-09 Sep-09 Jan-10 May-10 Sep-10 Jan-11 May-11 Sep-11 Jan-12 May-12 Sep-12 Jan-130

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

IHSG, Indonesia

Hanseng, Hongkong

KLS, Malaysia

Nikkei, Japan

STI, Singapore

KOSPI, Korea

Index, 100=Jan 2009

Source: Yahoofinance

Page 37: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Indonesian Indices by sectorConsumer good , the most attractive

Jan-08 Jul-08 Jan-09 Jul-09 Jan-10 Jul-10 Jan-11 Jul-11 Jan-12 Jul-120

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

AgricultureMining

Basic Industry

Miscellanous

Consumer Goods

PropertyInfrastructure

Finance

Trade & Service

Index, 100=Jan.2008

Source: Yahoofinance

Page 38: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

IDX Financial Data & Ratios, 2011Consumer goods went higher then the others

Industry EPS (Rp) BV (Rp) PER (x) PBV (x)

Consumer Goods Industry 5,679 13,813 16.2 8.7

Agriculture 1,298 1.79 3.9 2.2

Miscellaneous Industry 728 2,334 12.2 1.0

Mining 484 1,384 16.1 3.0

Basic Industry and Chemical 243 1,306 4.1 0.9

Finance 118 727 10.3 1.3

Infrastructure, Utilities & Transportation 91 952 11.0 2.0

Trade, Services & Investment 87 1,627 22.3 2.3

Property, Real Estate And Building Construction 64 417 23.1 1.4

Sumber: IDX Statistics 2012

Page 39: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Issuance Volume of Bond Market, 2012Bonds as financing resources in Indonesia: Very Low

KR MY TH SG ID PH VN0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

Govt LCY Gov FCY Corp LCY Corp FCY

US

D B

illions

Source: ADB

Page 40: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Asian LCY Bond Returns IndexIndonesian bonds’ return: the Highest in Asia

Jan-

01

Jul-0

1

Jan-

02

Jul-0

2

Jan-

03

Jul-0

3

Jan-

04

Jul-0

4

Jan-

05

Jul-0

5

Jan-

06

Jul-0

6

Jan-

07

Jul-0

7

Jan-

08

Jul-0

8

Jan-

09

Jul-0

9

Jan-

10

Jul-1

0

Jan-

11

Jul-1

1

Jan-

12

Jul-1

2

Jan-

130

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

Indonesia ChinaKoreaMalaysiaPhilippinesSingaporeThailand

Source: ADB

Page 41: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Foreign Holdings in LCY Government BondsHigh return attracted foreign investors

Dec-03 Dec-04 Dec-05 Dec-06 Dec-07 Dec-08 Dec-09 Dec-10 Dec-11 Dec-120.0

5.0

10.0

15.0

20.0

25.0

30.0

35.0

40.0

Indonesia 33.0

Japan 8.8

Korea 9.5

Malaysia 29.8

Thailand 16.4

%

Source: ADB

Page 42: Financial Evolution and Regulatory Reform in Indonesia Hendri Saparini, PhD CORE Institute ECONIT Advisory Group Independent tink tank in Economic Development.

Foreign Ownership on Portfolio InvestmentForeign investors’ domination

Year

Bank Indonesia Certificat

e (SBI)

%

Tradable Governm

ent Securities

SBN

% Equity % Total

2008 8.4 10 87.4 17 452 60 548

2009 44.18 5 108 19 783 61 935

2010 54.93 27 195.76 31 1,184 63

1,435

2011 7.8 10 222.86 31 1,211 60

1,442

2012 0.41 0.3 270.52 33

1,484 59

1,755

Source: Bank Indonesia, MOF, KSEI