ported Indonesia’s benchmark stock index is down about 30% so far this year, foreign investors have net sold roughly $3.9 billion of shares, and total market value has fallen to about $601 billion from more than $900 billion. MSCI called recent policy steps “a step in the right direction,” but said it could still open a formal consultation on a downgrade at its November review, so investors are treating the extra time as a test of follow-through, not a clean all-clear.
Why should I care?
For markets: MSCI’s November call and a $13 billion outflow estimate still hang over Indonesia.
Index labels can move money through the market’s “plumbing.” If Indonesia is frozen or downgraded, benchmark-tracking emerging-markets funds may have to cut exposure, or at least reduce risk early, because holding off-index positions can break their mandates. Any buyers replacing them would likely come from frontier-focused funds, which are typically smaller, so forced selling may not be fully absorbed. That imbalance can pressure liquidity and valuations even before any decision takes effect, keeping Indonesian shares under an overhang until November’s review clarifies whether the country stays inside the bigger emerging-markets buyer base.
