Indonesia state owned enterprise super-holding will be started with asset at 1 trillion USD (2024)

Danantara Indonesia to draw down $3 billion from $10 billion credit line, sources say​



By Stefanno Sulaiman and Yantoultra Ngui

*Credit line marks the largest of its kind in Southeast Asia

*Funds to be used for investments including a chemical plant, source says

*Five foreign banks appointed as lead arrangers for the facility, source says



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Danantara already get 60 trillion Rupiah (3.7 billion USD) Dividen from SOE its managed for just first 2 months the Superholding getting established



JAKARTA, July 11 (Reuters) - Indonesian sovereign wealth fund Danantara is likely to draw down $3 billion initially from a $10 billion credit line and use it for investments including a chemical plant and co-financings with Qatar's and China's wealth funds, sources said.


The credit line, which a source said has been secured from five foreign banks, would become the biggest such loan disbursed in Southeast Asia by private sector banks when fully drawn down. The facility also represents the first private sector funding for Danantara, which was set up in February and given control of more than $900 billion worth of assets.


Daya Anagata Nusantara - better known as Danantara - is part of an ambitious plan of President Prabowo Subianto who swept to power last year by promising to grow the $1.5 trillion economy at a rate of 8% compared to the current 5%.


Danantara did not respond to a request for comment. The two sources, who had direct knowledge of the matter, asked to remain anonymous because they were not authorised to speak to the media.


One of the projects the initial drawn down sum will be used for is a roughly $800 million chlor-alkali and ethylene dichloride plant of petrochemical firm Chandra Asri Pacific , one of the sources said.


In June, Danantara and the Indonesia Investment Authority, the country's first sovereign fund, said they might become new investors in the project, which will produce material used in the water treatment, soap, alumina, and nickel industries.


Earlier this year, Danantara also signed agreements separately with the Qatar Investment Authority and China Investment Corporation on potential co-investments. It was not immediately clear which projects in these partnerships would be financed by the initial drawn down amount.


DBS, HSBC, Natixis SA, Standard Chartered and United Overseas Bank were appointed this week as the lead arrangers for the $10 billion facility, one of the sources said, adding they were among 11 foreign banks that submitted proposals.


DBS, Natixis and HSBC declined to comment, while the other two banks did not immediately respond to requests for comment.


The $10 billion credit facility will be available for the next three years, the source said, adding that Danantara had no plans to issue bonds at the moment.


The facility carries interest rates on par with Indonesian sovereign bond yields, and each bank committed to lend $1 billion without security and government guarantees, the source said, adding: "Danantara is a sovereign." As a comparison, Indonesia sold in January $900 million worth of five-year U.S. dollar-denominated bonds with a 5.30% yield.


Loan proposals from some other foreign banks were considered but they could not agree on terms as those lenders had asked for a government guarantee, the source said. As lead arrangers, they will typically bring in other banks to fund the remainder of the total facility.


(Reporting by Stefanno Sulaiman in Jakarta and Yantoultra Ngui in Singapore; Editing by Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam and Muralikumar Anantharaman)


 

Sovereign fund Danantara Indonesia, Japan's JBIC agree to jointly finance renewables, power projects​



By Reuters

July 11, 20252:19 PM GMT+7
Updated July 11, 2025



JAKARTA, July 11 (Reuters) - Sovereign wealth fund Danantara Indonesia said on Friday it had signed a memorandum of understanding with the Japan Bank for International Cooperation to jointly finance renewable energy, water management, and power transmission projects in Indonesia.

Reporting by Stefanno Sulaiman; Editing by Martin Petty

 

Danantara aims to bring 889 SOEs under one command: CIO​



July 4, 2025 18:25 GMT+700

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Chief investment officer (CIO) of Indonesian sovereign wealth fund Danantara, Pandu Sjahrir, speaking at the Digital Economy and Finance Forum organized by the Indonesian Fintech Association in Jakarta on Friday (July 4, 2025). /ANTARA/Muhammad Heriyanto



Jakarta (ANTARA) - Chief investment officer (CIO) of Indonesian sovereign wealth fund Danantara, Pandu Sjahrir, has outlined his goal of bringing all 889 state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in the country under a unified command led by Danantara Indonesia.

“At Danantara, we are now focusing on aligning all 889 SOEs under one command, moving away from a mindset of individual interests, but instead (focusing) on how we can cooperate with one another,” he said at the Digital Economy and Finance Forum in Jakarta on Friday.

The forum was organized by the Indonesian Fintech Association.

According to Sjahrir, the unified command is intended to streamline SOE consolidation and enhance their cooperation to support the national target of achieving 8 percent year-on-year economic growth, which was outlined by President Prabowo Subianto.

“One of the President’s aspirations is for all of us to unite to achieve this major goal of sustainable 8 percent economic growth. Now is the right time to stop thinking beyond individual roles and start thinking about Indonesia as a whole,” he said.

Danantara is targeting to consolidate the current 889 SOEs into fewer than 200 companies.

Since its establishment, Danantara has engaged in various international investment cooperations, including corporate actions such as providing capital support to SOEs.

The initiatives have included the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Saudi Arabia’s ACWA Power for project funding worth up to US$10 billion.

Danantara has also formed a strategic partnership with the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) to manage an investment fund of US$4 billion to support development projects in Indonesia.

In terms of corporate actions, Danantara has provided a shareholder loan of Rp6.65 trillion (about US$415.6 million) to national airline PT Garuda Indonesia (Persero) Tbk.

In addition, in collaboration with the private sector, Danantara and PT Chandra Asri Pacific Tbk (TPIA) are working to support the development of a chlorine alkali-ethylene dichloride (CA-EDC) plant, with a total investment of US$800 million.


 
Prabowo Sets Target for Danantara: Returns Above 7.5% Per Year

fsd, CNBC Indonesia
22 July 2025 12:29

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Jakarta, CNBC Indonesia – Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Daya Anagata Nusantara Investment Management Agency (BPI) Danantara, Rosan P. Roeslani, revealed that he has been given an important assignment by President Prabowo Subianto.


Through a video post on his official Instagram account, Rosan explained that Prabowo has set a target for the sovereign wealth fund (SWF) he leads to deliver an annual return of more than 7.5%.


Rosan also disclosed that he is summoned every week to meet with the President to discuss Danantara.


“You could say every week I’m called (by the President), and not just once or twice a week, to report on Danantara’s progress. The President said, the minimum return should be 7.5%,” said Rosan, as quoted by CNBC Indonesia on Tuesday (July 22, 2025).


Even so, Rosan stated that they want Danantara to at least achieve a return above the company’s cost of capital, but they do not deny their hope to earn returns exceeding 7.5%.


“We invest in various sectors, including health, industry, renewable energy, downstream processing, and other investments that, in our view, generate good returns and have a broad economic impact on all Indonesian society. So that is our guiding principle,” Rosan explained.


Rosan emphasized that Danantara is a fund that must be managed, invested, and safeguarded properly while adhering to all norms and existing laws and regulations.


“Our SWF (Danantara) is now the 6th largest in the world after Norway, the UAE, China, and others,” said Rosan.


For your information, Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, valued at $1.8 trillion last year, reported a record annual profit of 2.51 trillion kroner (US$ 222 billion) or about Rp 3,620 trillion, driven by a tech stock rally. This was Norway’s SWF’s second consecutive record annual profit, surpassing the 2.2 trillion kroner earned in 2023.


Norway’s SWF investment returns in 2024 reached 13%, with stock market investments alone returning 18% last year.


At the end of last year, 71.4% of Norway’s SWF assets were allocated to equities, up from 70.9% in 2023, bonds decreased to 26.6% from 27.1%, unlisted real estate fell to 1.8% from 1.9%, and renewable infrastructure represented 0.1% of investments, unchanged from the previous year.



 

Prabowo Touts $1 Trillion Danantara Fund as Job-Creation Engine​





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President Prabowo Subianto greets his guests after delivering his annual state address at the People's Consultative Assembly in Jakarta, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. (Antara Photo/Dhemas Reviyanto)



Jakarta. President Prabowo Subianto on Friday told parliament that Indonesia’s newly established sovereign wealth fund, Danantara, will play a pivotal role in creating millions of “quality jobs” through strategic investments, while managing one of the largest asset portfolios in the world.

Delivering his inaugural state address at the People’s Consultative Assembly (MPR) since taking office in October, Prabowo said Danantara now oversees assets worth more than $1 trillion.

“In our efforts to accelerate investment in the industrialization of natural resources and other strategic sectors, and to create quality jobs, we -- together with the House of Representatives -- have established Danantara. It’s an investment management entity that manages assets totaling more than $1 trillion,” Prabowo said. “Danantara will create millions of quality jobs, especially in the downstream industry.”


He added that industrializing mineral and mining products will substantially boost the added value of Indonesia’s exports and make a major contribution to the national economy.

The president also claimed that unemployment has dropped to its lowest level since the 1998 Asian financial crisis.

As part of broader job-creation efforts, the government has launched 80,000 Merah Putih Cooperatives to strengthen rural economies. These cooperatives focus on small-scale businesses for farmers and fishermen, while also supplying affordable basic goods such as rice, cooking oil, cooking gas, and fertilizer with government subsidies.

“The presence of cooperatives in every village will boost rural economies and create millions of jobs,” Prabowo said.

Prabowo noted that in the first half of 2025, investment surged 13.6 percent year-on-year to Rp 942 trillion ($58.3 billion), generating 1.2 million new jobs. Despite global economic and geopolitical tensions, Indonesia’s economy grew 5.12 percent in the second quarter of 2025, and “several economists have expressed confidence” that growth will accelerate in the coming years, he said.

In another part of his address, aired live by BTV, Prabowo claimed his administration had saved Rp 300 trillion ($18.6 billion) in state funds previously vulnerable to misuse and corruption. Austerity measures targeting non-essential trips and meetings, he said, have freed up “hundreds of trillions of rupiah” for more urgent and productive spending.


 
Deputy SOE Minister: In a Month, Perum to Join Danantara

By Romys Binekasri
3–4 minutes

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Jakarta, CNBC Indonesia – Deputy Minister of State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) Kartika Wirjoatmodjo revealed that the transfer of assets from state-owned companies in the form of Perum (State Public Corporations) to Danantara will be completed within a month.


“It’s ongoing, it’s ongoing for the Perum, maybe in a month we’ll complete the Perum, including Antara,” he said when met at the Antara Heritage Building in Jakarta, Monday (25/8).


Kartika, popularly known as Tiko, explained that the process is currently under legal review.


Previously, Tiko had stated that SOEs with Perum status would first be converted into limited liability companies (PT/Persero) before being transferred into the Danantara Investment Management Agency (BPI Danantara).


According to him, the government is still reviewing the transformation process of companies with Perum status. “Transformation first, yes. This is being processed, we are still reviewing the Perum,” he said when meeting with Commission VI of the House of Representatives (DPR RI) on Wednesday (19/3).


Subsequently, once Perum SOEs have been converted into PTs, they can then be integrated into Danantara. The change in status requires an inbreng (transfer of equity/shareholding), which is scheduled to be carried out this month.


“If these are SOEs that are not Perum, then we do the inbreng in relation to their operations,” he added.


However, Tiko has not yet specified which Perum SOEs will be converted into Persero companies.


Meanwhile, SOE Minister Erick Thohir said that the government is currently in the process of transferring SOE shareholdings (inbreng) into Danantara, including several Perum SOEs. This is because all SOE assets will eventually be managed under Danantara.


“Because this is a corporation, it must be more agile, more flexible. In the inbreng government regulation currently being prepared, one of the clauses we are including is regarding Perum,” he said at the SOE Ministry office in Jakarta, Friday (14/3).


Erick added that this move reflects full support for having all state-owned company assets consolidated and managed by Danantara.


“I fully support this because it is an extraordinary breakthrough. When SOE assets and cash flows are consolidated, they become a single entity, without being tied back to the state budget or treated as state assets,” he explained.


Erick noted that eventually the Perum SOEs will either be converted into PTs or have parts of their business spun off to relevant ministries.


“One of the case studies we examined in depth was Bulog, as the off-taker for the National Food Agency,” he concluded.


 
Great — here’s a policy implication summary of the article, written in a monitoring/analytical style:




Policy Implication Summary – Integration of Perum into Danantara


Key Development


  • The Indonesian government plans to consolidate Perum (State Public Corporations) into Danantara, with completion expected within a month.
  • Before integration, each Perum must be converted into a Persero (PT/limited liability company) through an inbreng (shareholding transfer).

Implications


  1. Asset Consolidation & Flexibility
    • Consolidating Perum into Danantara will centralize SOE assets and cash flows into a single corporate structure.
    • This makes state-owned enterprises more agile and commercially driven, reducing their direct classification as “state assets” tied to the state budget.
  2. Legal & Structural Transformation
    • The transformation of Perum into PTs marks a shift from public service orientation to corporate governance, giving them greater operational flexibility.
    • Some business lines may be spun off to ministries, ensuring public service functions are maintained.
  3. Strategic Direction
    • This move supports the government’s strategy of strengthening Danantara as a super-holding for state assets, aligning with broader fiscal reforms.
    • Case studies like Bulog (Perum Bulog – food logistics) indicate that Perum entities will continue to serve strategic national functions but within a more corporatized framework.

Risks & Considerations


  • The shift could raise questions on accountability and transparency, since assets are no longer directly tied to the state budget.
  • The balance between public service obligations and commercial efficiency must be carefully managed, especially for Perum with strategic roles (e.g., Perhutani in forestry, Bulog in food security).



👉 Takeaway: The integration of Perum into Danantara represents a major restructuring of Indonesia’s state-owned assets. It aims to improve efficiency, agility, and commercial flexibility while consolidating financial flows. However, it also introduces challenges in safeguarding public service obligations and ensuring transparency in asset management.



 
Perfect 👍 Let’s add PalmCo into the comparison, since it’s another major state-linked player in plantations.

Perum Perhutani vs Agrinas vs PalmCo – Comparative Overview

Perum Perhutani (State Public Corporation for Forestry Management)

  • Legal Form: Perum (State Public Corporation), fully state-owned, not a PT.
  • Assets: ~2.4 million hectares of forest land in Java & Madura.
  • Focus: Forestry (teak, pine, hardwoods), resin, eco-tourism, community partnership schemes.
  • Orientation: Mix of public service (conservation) and commercial forestry.

Agrinas (PT Agro Industri Nasional)

  • Legal Form: PT Persero (SOE limited liability company).
  • Assets: Over 1 million hectares of palm oil plantations across Indonesia.
  • Focus: Palm oil production, downstream agro-industry, food & bioenergy security.
  • Orientation: Commercial agribusiness, less tied to public service than Perum.

PalmCo (Part of PTPN Holding – Sub-holding for Palm Oil)

  • Legal Form: PT (SOE sub-holding under PTPN III Holding, created in 2023 during BUMN consolidation).
  • Assets: Around 1.1 million hectares of palm oil plantations (making it one of the largest palm oil plantation companies globally).
  • Focus: Palm oil upstream (plantations) and downstream integration (refining, biofuel, food supply).
  • Orientation: Highly commercial, with a mandate to drive national palm oil industry competitiveness, exports, and energy diversification (biofuel/B35 program).

Comparison Table

AspectPerum PerhutaniAgrinasPalmCo (PTPN Sub-holding)
Legal FormPerum (State Public Corporation)PT Persero (SOE)PT Persero (SOE sub-holding under PTPN III Holding)
Ownership100% government, no shares100% government100% government (via PTPN Holding)
Asset Base~2.4M ha forests (Java–Madura)~1M+ ha palm oil~1.1M ha palm oil (global scale)
FocusForestry, timber, resin, eco-tourism, conservationPalm oil plantations, agro-industryPalm oil plantations, refining, downstream biofuel
OrientationMixed: public service + commercial forestryProfit-oriented agribusinessProfit-oriented, globally competitive agribusiness
Strategic RoleEnvironmental stewardship, rural developmentNational agro-industry, food & bioenergyNational champion for palm oil, biofuel, exports

Policy Context

  • Perhutani must first transform into a PT before being absorbed by Danantara, with its conservation/public service angle making it unique compared to pure commercial SOEs.
  • Agrinas and PalmCo are both already PTs, with palm oil as a commercial focus, and fit more seamlessly into the Danantara consolidation model.
  • Together, Agrinas + PalmCo manage over 2 million hectares of palm oil assets, making them critical to Indonesia’s agro-industrial and bioenergy strategies.
👉 In essence:
  • Perum Perhutani = Forest & conservation-heavy, semi-commercial.
  • Agrinas = Large-scale commercial palm oil & agro-industry.
  • PalmCo = Mega palm oil giant, designed as a national and global player in biofuel and exports.

Would you like me to also make a short “Danantara integration impact” note — explaining how bringing these three (Perhutani, Agrinas, PalmCo) under Danantara could reshape Indonesia’s land asset consolidation and state cash flow?
 
Adding Perum into Danantara is good for Indonesian Aerospace as one example. Perum Perhutani for example has huge land around Kertajati new Airport.

The land own by Perum Perhutani could be used by Indonesian Aerospace to enlarge its production facility. It is very ideal for MRO , fighter and wide body plane manufacturing line that needs long runway.

The location is also close to its main manufacturing in Bandung, the same province with Kertajati in Majalengka. This is why Elang Hitam MALE UCAV drone has maiden flight in Kertajati

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Kertajati is owned by Indonesia government and operated by West Java local company.

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Yes, you are right 👍Kertajati International Airport (BIJB – Bandara Internasional Jawa Barat) in Majalengka, West Java does in fact sit partly on Perum Perhutani land.


Here’s the breakdown:




Kertajati Airport & Perhutani Land


  • Location: Kertajati, Majalengka Regency, West Java.
  • Developer: Built by the Indonesian government through PT Bandarudara Internasional Jawa Barat (BIJB), a regional government-owned company of West Java Province. Later, Angkasa Pura II (SOE) took part in its operation.
  • Land Source:
    • The airport complex (≈ 1,800 hectares) was developed on land controlled by Perum Perhutani.
    • The government acquired/converted part of Perhutani’s forestry concession in Majalengka into airport land.
    • This required special arrangements, because Perum land (as state public corporation assets) cannot be sold freely, only transferred by government regulation.



Why Perhutani Land Was Used


  1. Strategic Location – Kertajati was designed as the main West Java airport (to replace or complement Bandung’s Husein Sastranegara).
  2. Large Available Land – Majalengka’s Perhutani forest concession provided a contiguous area large enough for a modern airport.
  3. Government Authority – Since Perhutani is a Perum, the government could reallocate its land for national infrastructure projects through policy and compensation schemes.



Comparison Case


This is not unique: Perhutani’s land has also been used for toll roads, dams, and other infrastructure projects in Java. Its status as a Perum makes its land a strategic reserve that can be tapped for government development, with the challenge being balancing forestry/environmental impact with economic projects.




👉 So yes: Kertajati Airport is a government-built project developed on Perum Perhutani land in Majalengka, highlighting how Perum assets can be repurposed for national infrastructure.




Do you want me to also prepare a short policy note on how Perhutani’s land has been repeatedly used for national projects (like Kertajati, toll roads, dams), and how this could affect its role once integrated into Danantara?
 

Purbaya’s $12b Move: BNI, BRI, Mandiri Get Almost $3.4 Billion Each​



Jayanty Nada Shofa
September 12, 2025 | 4:18 pm

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New Finance Minister talked to the journalist


Jakarta. The government will transfer Rp 200 trillion or around $12 billion to five state-controlled banks by Friday evening, according to Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa, with BNI and Mandiri each getting more than a quarter of the money.


This is part of the newly minted minister’s attempt to spur economic activities via loan disbursements.


In this rollout, three main state lenders, BNI, BRI, and Mandiri, will each receive Rp 55 trillion (nearly $3.4 billion). BSI -- the Islamic bank that was the result of the merger between the three banks’ sharia units -- will receive Rp 10 trillion ($610.9 million). The remaining Rp 25 trillion ($1.5 billion) will go to BTN.

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BSI Company Profile

Purbaya said that BSI got the smallest portion due to its bank’s size, which is comparably smaller than the rest. The government decided to inject some money into BSI as it is the only bank that has access to Aceh province.


According to Purbaya, the government has been keeping the money meant for state spending at the country’s central bank. Moving the money out of Bank Indonesia will enable the commercial banks to use the unspent funds.


“This way, even if we [the government] don’t spend the money, our banks can access it to drive economic activities,” Purbaya told the press in Jakarta.


“We want to create liquidity in the financial system, so the banks will be urged to issue loans.”


The Rp 200 trillion will make its way to the banks in the form of “deposit on call”. This scheme allows the government to have ready access to the funds at any time.


“But this is nothing to worry about. We have enough [state money] to spend, and we will manage it well. So we [the government] would not suddenly withdraw everything,” Purbaya told reporters.


Purbaya also dropped hints that the government might even inject more money into lenders if necessary, citing that the Rp 200 trillion was only the “first phase”. He stated: “Let’s see. If it’s still not enough, we will transfer more money.”


Chief economic affairs minister Airlangga Hartarto gave a brief yet positive comment on the Rp 200 trillion deposit earlier that day.


“Boosting the liquidity in the market is always good,” Airlangga said, shortly before his meeting with Purbaya.


Indonesia reported that its bank credit issuance only grew 7.03 percent year-on-year (yoy) in July 2025. This indicated a decline compared to the previous month, in which the numbers reached 7.77 percent.


 

Indonesia Seeks to Boost Freeport Stake Beyond 61% in Ongoing Talks​


Ricki Putra Harahap

September 15, 2025 | 9:36 pm

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Freeport Indonesia's operations in Tembagapura, Mimika, Timika, Papua. (File Photo)


Jakarta. Indonesia plans to raise its ownership in Freeport Indonesia (PTFI) by more than 10 percent, potentially lifting the government’s stake to over 61 percent, Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Bahlil Lahadalia said on Monday.


Speaking after a closed-door meeting with President Prabowo Subianto, Bahlil revealed that negotiations with Freeport are progressing beyond the initial target of an additional 10 percent stake. He has been tasked with accelerating talks to finalize the deal.


“Initially we agreed to increase our shares by 10 percent, but the negotiations have now developed further, and God willing, it could be more than that,” Bahlil told reporters at the Presidential Palace complex in Jakarta.

The government currently controls 51 percent of PTFI through state mining holding company Mineral Industri Indonesia (MIND ID), which became the majority shareholder in 2018. Raising the stake to over 61 percent would strengthen Indonesia’s hold on one of the world’s largest copper and gold mines, located in Grasberg, Papua.

Bahlil linked the planned share purchase to the renewal of Freeport’s operating contract, which runs until 2041. “If the deal is finalized, we will consider extending Freeport’s contract,” he said.


He also added that the price of the additional shares would be "relatively low," citing the thin book value of Freeport’s remaining assets under the current arrangement. “For more than 10 percent, the cost is very cheap,” Bahlil said.


Freeport first signed a mining contract with Indonesia in 1967, giving the US-based company exclusive rights to explore and develop Grasberg. The contract was extended in 1991 to cover operations until 2021, sparking public debates over Indonesia’s share of revenues.

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Freeport Gold and Chopper smelter in Gresik, East Java


In 2009, Jakarta began pushing for revisions to Freeport’s contract to secure greater benefits, including higher royalties and local ownership. After years of negotiations, Freeport agreed in 2018 to divest 51 percent of its Indonesian unit to the government in a $3.85 billion deal. The agreement also required Freeport to build local smelters, aligning with former President Joko Widodo’s policy of promoting downstream industries.


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SOEs Ministry No Longer Relevant After Danantara, Economist Says​


Hanif Musyaffa, Alfida Rizky Febrianna

September 18, 2025 | 10:38 am

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Senior economist Aviliani speaks during a discussion hosted by B-Universe Media Holdings in Pantai Indah Kapuk 2, Tangerang, Banten, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025. (David Gita Roza)



Jakarta. Erick Thohir has been officially sworn in as youth and sports minister (Menpora), replacing Dito Ariotedjo, marking his departure from the post of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) minister. The reshuffle has sparked debate, particularly as it leaves the SOEs Ministry seat vacant.


The government has denied plans to merge the SOEs Ministry into Danantara, Indonesia’s sovereign wealth fund, despite speculation following the reshuffle. State Secretary Prasetyo Hadi said such a move was “not being considered for now,” though the option remains on the table. In a brief statement, Erick also sidestepped questions about whether the ministry would be folded into Danantara, simply saying: “I don’t know about that.”


The reshuffle puts the SOEs Ministry in limbo at a time when nearly all state firms are already under Danantara’s command. Since its establishment, the sovereign wealth fund has taken a decisive role, including scrapping commissioner bonuses and planning a merger between flag carrier Garuda Indonesia and Pertamina’s aviation arm, Pelita Air.


Economists say this shift raises a bigger question: Does Indonesia still need an SOEs Ministry? National Banking Association (Perbanas) economist Aviliani argued the ministry has lost relevance, with Danantara now managing most state-run companies.


“If the government envisions Danantara as Indonesia’s version of Singapore’s Temasek, then all SOE operations should be centralized under one entity. If even public service agencies will eventually be folded into Danantara, then what is left for the ministry? It would be better to dissolve it,” Aviliani said.


Rian Kiryanto, associate faculty member at the Indonesian Banking Development Institute (LPPI), offered a different view. He said the appointment of a new SOEs minister remains the president’s prerogative and should aim to strengthen collaboration with Danantara.


“Danantara already runs most SOEs. The new minister’s job will be to act as a strong tandem, ensuring synergy without disrupting the system or rhythm of SOEs going forward,” Rian said.


While overlaps remain, since the SOEs minister and deputies also sit on Danantara’s board, Rian argued this should be seen as an advantage. “Rather than a source of friction, this can accelerate government programs mandated to Danantara. The key is for the SOEs Ministry to move quickly and in sync,” he added.

 

Freeport Agrees on 12% Divestment Deal at No Cost: Danantara​




Jayanty Nada Shofa


September 30, 2025 | 9:25 pm


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Freeport Mine





Jakarta. US miner Freeport McMoran has agreed to divest 12 percent of its stake in a local arm to Indonesia at no cost, according to the sovereign wealth fund Danantara.

Indonesia has been pursuing a divestment deal as the country wishes to have greater control of one of the world’s largest copper and gold mines. The government was initially nudging the American company to divest 10 percent of its shares. However, Danantara CEO Rosan Roeslani revealed Tuesday that Freeport-McMoran was willing to let go of 12 percent of its stake “free of charge”. Rosan had recently returned from a US trip, during which he met with Freeport McMoran’s top brass for another round of negotiations.

“They [Freeport Mc-Moran] have said yes to divesting their 12 percent stake free of charge. … We [the Indonesian government] were negotiating for 10 percent, but praise be to God, we got an [extra] 12 percent stake,” Rosan told the press in Jakarta.


Rosan also said that Freeport had made some commitments to set up hospitals and universities in Indonesia’s easternmost region of Papua, which is also the center of the company’s operations. The investment minister then went on to say that these facilities aimed to produce better doctors to meet the local demand.

The government currently holds a 51.23 percent stake in Freeport Indonesia mainly via the state-run mining holding MIND ID, thereby leaving the remaining 48.77 percent to Freeport-McMoran. Danantara now has all state-run enterprises, including MIND ID, under its wings. Energy Minister Bahlil Lahadalia had previously said that Indonesia intended to close Freeport’s divestment deal by October.

Just recently, Freeport decided to suspend its operations at the Grasberg Block Cave mine in Papua after seven workers got trapped in a landslide. The incident has claimed two lives. As of Friday, the five other individuals were still missing. The workers were conducting development activities when a sudden rush of around 800,000 metric tons of wet material entered the mine. The flow also reached the service level of the mine where the missing workers were.

According to the company’s estimates, the Grasberg ore body makes up half of Freeport Indonesia’s estimated proven and probable reserves as of the end of 2024. It also represents 70 percent of its previously forecast copper and gold production through 2029.


 
Reform also for the state own enterprise law. Parliament has made new state own enterprise law

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(New) Finance Minister do sudden inspection when top executive of BNI Bank (one of banks under Danantara) held meeting in the bank HQ

Finance Minister now also has direct link to SOE as FM is among top leadership in Danantara.

This I think is a show of leadership from FM within SOE companies

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