Field notes on Indonesian capital markets.
Selected writing on share-backed financing, disclosure, and ownership — drawn from the way Indonesian-listed positions actually behave.
What we have learned structuring against IDX shares.
These notes are written for shareholders, founders, and advisers thinking carefully about liquidity. Each one stays close to the mechanics of the Indonesia Stock Exchange — the rules, the boards, and the structures that decide what an Indonesian share can actually do as collateral.
Dividends & Corporate Actions When Your IDX Shares Are Pledged
Who receives dividends, votes, and handles rights issues, bonus shares, and splits while a position is pledged.
Read →Margin Calls, Top-Ups & Default on an IDX Stock Loan
What triggers a margin call, how top-up and cure periods work, and what happens on default and enforcement.
Read →OJK Disclosure & Private Share Pledges: When Must You Report?
How the 5% substantial-shareholding rules and the Capital Market Law bear on a private pledge of IDX shares.
Read →Tax Treatment of Indonesia Stock Loans: Income, Withholding & Deferral
How PPh and withholding apply to a pledge versus a sale, and why financing can defer a taxable disposal.
Read →The 49% Foreign-Ownership Cap and Your Pledged IDX Shares
What happens to sectoral caps when shares are pledged or enforced, and how structures respect KSEI and OJK limits.
Read →Block Trades vs Stock Loans: When to Sell vs Pledge IDX Shares
A decision framework for controlling shareholders weighing a clean exit against retaining control and upside.
Read →Stock Loan vs. Selling Shares: Raise Cash and Keep Your Indonesian Stock
Why a stock loan can beat selling when you need cash but want to keep ownership, dividends, and upside.
Read →How Much Can You Borrow Against Indonesian Shares? IDX Stock Loan LTV Explained
What sets your loan-to-value and how much an IDX position can raise.
Read →Foreign Ownership Limits and Indonesian Stock Loans: What Borrowers Should Know
How sector ownership caps and KSEI custody shape financing against IDX shares.
Read →Recourse vs. Non-Recourse Stock Loans in Indonesia: Which Is Safer?
The three recourse profiles and how the choice protects or exposes your other assets.
Read →Funding Succession Without Selling: Stock Loans for Indonesian Family Businesses
Raising liquidity for a generational transition while keeping the controlling block intact.
Read →How to Get a Stock Loan in Indonesia: A Step-by-Step Guide
From confidential enquiry to funding in five steps — what to expect and prepare.
Read →Indonesian Stock Loan Rates, Fees and Tenor: What a Share-Backed Loan Costs
How stock-loan pricing works and what drives the rate you are offered.
Read →Which Indonesian Stocks Qualify for a Stock Loan? IDX Eligibility
The factors that decide whether your shares can be financed, and at what LTV.
Read →Stock Loan vs. Margin Loan in Indonesia: Key Differences for Shareholders
How a share-backed stock loan differs from brokerage margin, and when each fits.
Read →A position is easier discussed than described.
If a note here speaks to your situation, the next step is a confidential conversation. A senior principal will reply — usually within one business day.