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Indonesia Regulator Expects Three-Quarters of Listed Firms to Meet 15% Free-Float Rule Within 1st yr

JAKARTA, March 3 (Reuters) - Indonesia's financial regulator said on Tuesday that it expects up ​to 75% of the companies listed on the country's ‌stock exchange to meet a new 15% free-float requirement within the first year of implementation.

Hasan Fawzi, interim chief capital market supervisor at the ​Financial Services Authority, said companies may be given different ​deadlines of one, two, or three years to comply ⁠with the requirement.

Indonesia is implementing a series of capital market reforms ​after index provider MSCI warned the Southeast Asian country in January ​that transparency issues put it at risk of being downgraded to frontier market status by as early as May.

Reuters has previously reported that the bourse may divide companies into ​two batches based on their readiness to offer more stocks to ​meet the 15% free-float rule, with the first batch to be granted one year ‌to ⁠comply and the second given two years.

"We will see that around 70-75% of our issuers are likely to have reached the minimum target of 15% by the end of the ​first year," Hasan ​told reporters. As ⁠of now, around 60% companies have reached the 15% mark, he added.

After three years, the regulator ​will prepare an exit policy for those companies that failed to ​meet the ⁠requirement, Hasan said without elaborating further. He reiterated that the policy will be adjusted to account for the capacity of the market.

OJK met with ⁠Fitch Ratings ​representatives last week as part of ​their annual assessment, with both sides discussing Indonesia's programme to reform its capital market and support the national ​economic agenda.

Reporting by Stefanno Sulaiman, Ananda Teresia; Editing by David Stanway

Source: Reuters


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