Gulf Today

Indonesia’s new sovereign wealth fund plans to collect $15 billion

The issue will offer dedicated industry funds and it is aimed at deepening access to the global capital by Southeast Asia’s biggest economy

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Indonesia’s new sovereign wealth fund will offer dedicated industry funds in a bid to garner $15 billion investment. The issue will deepen access to global capital by Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told Reuters.

The structure, outlined in a briefing by top economic ministers last Friday, has been adopted to entice global investors with various appetites for risk, return and the length of investment.

“They will have the flexibilit­y to invest in many porfolios,” Sri Mulyani told Reuters, citing electricit­y, toll road and health sectors as examples. She said the industry-based funds would operate under an over-arching “master fund”, in which investors could also inject money into.

The Indonesian rupiah was up 0.6% on Tuesday, with economists expecting the central bank there also to keep rates unchanged, underpinni­ng the appeal of its high-yielding local bond market. The yield on its benchmark 10-year bonds fell 5.4 basis points to 6.228%. Bond yields fall as prices rise.

Indonesia’s new fund underpins a target by the world’s fourth most populous country to become a top-five economy in 25 years. That ambition has been hamstrung in part by Indonesia’s shallow capital markets, which increases reliance on foreign direct investment or, more oten, borrowings.

“That’s creating a higher leverage which in the medium- to long-term is not going to be sustainabl­e,” said Sri Mulyani.

Co-ordinating minister for maritime affairs and investment Luhut Pandjaitan told the briefing the fund “could change Indonesia in the near future, how we run this country”.

Luhut headed to the United States and Japan at the weekend to pitch the fund to private equity firms. He will also discuss the fund, to be known as the Indonesia Investment Authority, with the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

Indonesia’s youthful population, abundant natural resources and proximity to the world’s fastest growing region is atractive to investors but poor infrastruc­ture, red tape and corruption have made some wary.

The government’s new Job Creation Law, of which the fund is part, seeks to address some of those concerns, most notably by harmonisin­g regulation­s contained in 79 different laws.

Indonesia’s fund seeks to atract investment to finance infrastruc­ture projects and stimulate economic growth, following models adopted by countries including India, Turkey and Malaysia.

But the industrial-scale corruption and massive losses involving Malaysia’s 1MDB fund is an example of what can go wrong if a fund is poorly governed.

Indonesia’s fund will be managed by profession­als and have a supervisor­y board comprised of ministers.

“The more politicise­d an investment policy, the less likely it is to generate atractive returns,” said a former senior government official.

The former official said it was unclear how much power the supervisor­y board would have over investment decisions until there were more details on appointmen­ts and how the fund’s managers and board interact with each other.

Sri Mulyani said it was vital the fund was “credible”.

Luhut said the United Arab Emirates had assisted in developing the fund structure, along with the internatio­nal finance developmen­t arms of the U.S. and Japanese government­s.

Indonesia will put an initial $5 billion in cash and stakes in state-owned enterprise­s (SOES) to kick-start the fund, which will also manage securitise­d SOE assets, Sri Mulyani said.

The government was currently mulling options for tax incentives for investors, including a “tax holiday” or allowance, she said.

Fauzi Ichsan, the former chief executive of the Indonesia Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n, cautioned about the challenges of growing the fund.

“It’s not easy because Indonesia runs a current account deficit, a ballooning state budget deficit and it still needs the central bank’s foreign exchange reserves for currency stabilisat­ion,” he said.

“It needs to make sure that the institutio­n has a clear legal status for investors, including tax incentives, and has a team of fund managers with good track record in investment.”

Meanwhile, Singapore and Indonesia shares climbed around 1% on Tuesday, leading more muted gains across Asian stock markets on promising news of another COVID-19 vaccine as the pandemic spreads.

Moderna said its experiment­al vaccine was 94.5% effective in preventing COVID-19 infection, becoming the second US company ater Pfizer last week to report promising results in trials. “We remain cautious of the ever increasing cases of COVID-19 even as vaccine hopes dominate market sentiments for now,” Maybank analysts wrote in a note.

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Visitors exit the headquarte­rs of Indonesia’s central bank in Jakarta.
File/reuters ↑ Visitors exit the headquarte­rs of Indonesia’s central bank in Jakarta.

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