Jakarta, March 1, 2026, 15:12 (WIB) — Market’s done for the day.
- IDX will roll out a fresh shareholder list and start implementing the new 15% free-float rule, Reuters reported.
- IDX Composite slipped last week, with banks pushing higher even as energy and mining names pulled the index down.
- Monday brings fresh trade and inflation numbers—figures that could jolt rate expectations and tilt risk appetite.
Indonesia’s stock exchange plans to roll out an updated shareholder roster next week as it starts enforcing a stricter free-float requirement—one that could pressure over 200 listed firms to boost their public float, interim CEO Jeffrey Hendrik told Reuters. “Our main concern is how the additional supply of stocks will be absorbed,” Hendrik said. Reuters
Timing couldn’t be worse. The IDX Composite trails for the year, and liquidity dries up quickly when policy news hits alongside rate jitters. On Monday, traders will be pressing for answers—ownership details, and just how much stock might hit the market.
Fiscal risk is back on the radar. “Interest payments have very likely exceeded the important 15% threshold of government revenue last year,” Rain Yin, sovereign analyst at S&P Global Ratings, told an Asia-Pacific webinar. Kim Eng Tan, managing director for sovereign ratings at S&P Asia-Pacific, flagged that asset prices could come under pressure if index reclassification forces changes to benchmark weightings. IDN Financials
Traders showed jitters heading into the weekend, but there was little outright panic. The Jakarta Composite Index slipped 0.44% for the Feb. 23–27 stretch, closing at 8,235.485 after swinging between 8,093.749 and 8,437.089. Foreign investors, according to IDNFinancials data, put up a net buy of 4.91 trillion rupiah in the regular market. Bank Mega soared 40.48%, Bakrie & Brothers ripped 76.86% higher. On the flip side, energy and mining players—Dian Swastatika Sentosa, Bumi Resources Minerals, and Bumi Resources—dragged on the index. IDN Financials
Bakrie & Brothers is now on the clock. Finance director Roy Hendrajanto M. Sakti said the company’s rights issue—offering 90 billion new shares to current holders—aims to raise “between IDR 4 trillion and IDR 6.5 trillion,” with the final tally due March 9. CEO Anindya N. Bakrie said funds will go to clearing obligations and boosting business tied to the Cimanggis Cibitung Tollways acquisition. IDN Financials
That kind of company-driven action tends to matter in Jakarta, where a single corporate move can quickly shift focus off the main index. The timing also comes as the bourse pushes to improve trading standards and expand the stock supply for investors.
The week isn’t out of the woods yet. Inflation delivering an unexpected jolt, or the rupiah slipping, could knock banks and consumer stocks early. And if there’s even a whiff that the market can’t handle more share supply, profit-taking could accelerate, especially in those thinly held names.
The next key event lands Monday, when Indonesia’s statistics office is set to publish January trade figures and February inflation at 0400 GMT (11:00 a.m. Jakarta). According to a Reuters poll, analysts are expecting a trade surplus of $2.76 billion and headline inflation running at 4.31% year-on-year. Core inflation, which excludes both government-regulated prices and volatile food, is projected to come in at 2.48%. Reuters