Friday, November 8, 2024

Indonesia delays launch of Danantara sovereign wealth fund, awaiting final regulations

Reading Time: < 1 minute
Julian Isaac

Journalist

Editor

Interview

The government has announced a delay in launching its sovereign wealth fund, the Badan Pengelola Investasi (BPI) Daya Anagata Nusantara, or Danantara, awaiting until President Prabowo Subianto returns from his overseas trip in two weeks.

Officials said that they are taking a cautious approach to ensure the fund’s regulatory framework is fully established before moving forward.

Muliaman Darmansyah Hadad, Head of BPI Danantara, said forming the new sovereign fund will not require amending Indonesia’s State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) Law. Instead, it will be governed by revisions to two government regulations (PP) and a presidential regulation (Perpres) that are currently in the drafting phase.

“There are two PPs and a Perpres being revised, which will provide the legal foundation,” Hadad said on Wednesday, November 6, 2024.

Documents detailing the Danantara Indonesia Sovereign Fund indicate that BPI Danantara will begin operations with an initial asset base of approximately US$600 billion (Rp9,429.8 trillion) and will function similarly to Singapore’s Temasek Holdings, allowing it to invest both domestically and abroad.

Seven major SOEs have been designated to fall under Danantara’s portfolio: Bank Mandiri, Bank Rakyat Indonesia (BRI), PLN, Pertamina, Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI), Telkom Indonesia, and PT Mineral Industri Indonesia (MIND ID).

Over the next several years, Danantara aims to expand its managed assets to US$982 billion (Rp15,433 trillion), positioning it as the fourth-largest sovereign wealth fund globally.

This gradual expansion will eventually include additional state-owned assets to bolster its portfolio.

Currently, the largest sovereign wealth fund in the world is Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global, managing over US$1.7 trillion.

President Prabowo envisions Danantara as a powerful tool to consolidate and leverage national assets for the welfare of the Indonesian people, aligning with the mandate set forth in Article 33 of the 1945 Constitution.

Julian Isaac

Journalist

 

Editor

 

Interview

SUBSCRIBE NOW
We will provide you with an invoice for your reimbursable expenses.

Free

New to Indonesian market? Read our free articles before subscribing to the premium plan. If you already run your business in Indonesia, make sure to subscribe to the premium subscription so you won’t miss any intelligence & business opportunities.

Premium

$550 USD/Year

or

$45 USD/Month

Cancelation: you can cancel your subscription at any time, by sending us an email inquiry@ibp-media.com

Add keywords to your market watch and receive notification:
Schedule a free consultation with us:

We’ll contact you for confirmation.

FURTHER READING

Minister of State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) Erick Thohir has expressed his support for the establishment of the Daya Anagata Nusantara Investment Management Agency or BPI Danantara, a sovereign wealth fund which is projected to become the new SOEs Superholding.
Legal and business experts have suggested the establishment of legal umbrella for policy executors within the country’s State-owned Enterprises (SOEs) − a paramount backbone behind the government’s ambitious 8-percent economic growth target − in order to help them avoid legal sanctions for taking a wrong direction against or misinterpretating government policies.
Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM) Bahlil Lahadalia inaugurated Djoko Siswanto as Head of the Upstream Oil and Gas Regulatory Task Force (SKK Migas) on Thursday, November 7, 2024.
Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Sudaryono, expressed optimism about the future of Indonesia’s palm oil industry, emphasizing its potential to continue contributing to the national economy. Sudaryono highlighted Indonesia’s global leadership in palm oil production, accounting for 25 percent of the world’s vegetable oil and 59 percent of global palm oil output.
The Ministry of State-Owned Enterprises is intensifying efforts to transform state-owned enterprises (SOEs) by consolidating companies with similar businesses. The vision of SOEs Minister Erick Thohir’s vision, includes streamlining the number of SOEs from 47 to 30, organized them into 11 clusters, as a continuation of his earlier work in which he reduced the number of SOEs from 114 to 47.
Two subsidiaries of State energy company PT Pertamina − PT Pertamina EP (PEP) and PT Pertamina Hulu Sanga-Sanga (PHSS) − are embroiled in the Borderless Program, a breakthrough scheme to increase oil and gas production in Sanga-sanga area of East Kalimantan, the overlapping work area (WK) of both companies.