The global index provider MSCI has extended its review of Indonesia’s status as an “emerging” market economy until November, in order to allow it to assess a series of reforms that have been announced by President Prabowo Subianto’s administration.
MSCI first threatened the downgrade in January due to a number of transparency concerns in its stock market, including the high concentration of ownership in certain companies and the limited “free float” of shares – i.e., those openly available for public trading. Last week, in its annual Global Market Accessibility Review, MSCI also lowered Indonesia’s information flow criterion to negative, reflecting “structural issues in the opacity in shareholding structures and concerns about coordinated trading.”
In a statement on Tuesday, MSCI stated that if progress is insufficient by its November review, it “will consider a range of options for the appropriate treatment for the Indonesia market, potentially including a consultation on the reclassification of Indonesia from Emerging Markets to Frontier Markets.”
MSCI’s role as the primary benchmark for institutional investors gives it considerable power over emerging economies, and a downgrading of Indonesia to “frontier” status would likely trigger billions of dollars of capital outflows.
Even the threat of such an outcome has led to sell-offs in the Indonesian stock market, which has been one of the worst performing Asian markets in 2026. MSCI’s announcement in January sent the benchmark Jakarta stocks index into a tailspin, erasing $80 billion in market value. While it recovered somewhat, the
Accordingly, Tuesday’s reprieve was followed by a fillip in the Indonesian stock market, but the long-term outlook remains unclear. As Reuters noted, the delay will leave the market “facing prolonged uncertainty,” and there is no certainty that the long list reforms intended to address MSCI’s market transparency concerns will be sufficient.
These reforms include a doubling of the minimum free float for listed companies from 7.5 to 15 percent. The government has mandated disclosure for shareholders with at least a 1 percent holding in a company. The previous threshold was 5 percent.
Authorities also plan to bring the stock exchange into line with most of its regional peers by speeding up its “demutualization.” As Reuters explains, this “means making the exchange itself a public entity owned by shareholders, rather than the member-controlled, self-regulating organization it is currently.”
In its statement on Tuesday, MSCI acknowledged that these announcements “represent a step in the right direction.” But, it added, “what matters for international institutional investors is the consistent implementation and sustained effect of these measures across the market.”
As I noted last week, MSCI’s scrutiny has compounded the broader concerns about the management of Indonesia’s economy by Prabowo’s government.
Since coming into office in October 2024, Prabowo has pursued high-spending populist policies, including a multibillion-dollar free meal program, that have pushed the fiscal deficit toward its legally mandated ceiling of 3 percent of GDP and threatened to undermine the country’s reputation for conservative economic stewardship. The former general has also significantly increased the state’s involvement in the Indonesian economy in a bid to maximize the country’s return from natural resources and international trade.
A microcosm of this falling investor confidence has been the slide in the value of the rupiah. The currency has depreciated by more than 14 percent since Prabowo took office, and is now worth less against the U.S. dollar than during the Asian financial crisis of 1997-1998.



