Indonesia broadly welcomes foreign investment in its listed market, and most IDX shares can be held by non-Indonesian investors without restriction. But certain sectors carry foreign-ownership limits — caps on how much of a company foreign parties may hold — under the Positive Investment List (Presidential Regulation No. 10/2021) and sector-specific laws. Where such a limit applies, it shapes how a position held by, or sold to, a foreign party can be financed or enforced. A stock loan is built around the limit, not past it.
Key takeaways
- Most IDX shares are open to foreign ownership with no cap.
- Some sectors carry limits — banking, media, and others on the Positive Investment List.
- The limit matters at the edges — chiefly on enforcement or a sale to a foreign buyer, not in the ordinary life of a pledge.
- Custody is the same — the borrower opens an account with the designated custodian, over which the lender takes security; the collateral shares are held in that account in scripless form, with beneficial ownership preserved.
Where foreign-ownership limits come from
Indonesia regulates foreign investment through the Positive Investment List, which sets out the activities open to foreign capital and any conditions or ceilings that apply. Some industries — banking, certain media and telecommunications activities, and others — carry caps under that framework or under their own sector legislation. For a listed company in such a sector, there is a maximum proportion of shares that may sit in foreign hands. For the great majority of IDX counters, no such cap applies and a foreign holder is treated like any other.
Why it matters for a stock loan
In the ordinary life of a financing pledge, a foreign-ownership limit is rarely in play, because a pledge does not change who owns the shares. Beneficial ownership is preserved; the borrower opens an account with the designated custodian, over which the lender takes security, where the collateral shares are held. The limit becomes relevant at the edges of the transaction:
- On enforcement. If a lender ever had to realise the collateral, who could take or buy the shares — and in what proportion — may be constrained by the cap. That is factored into the structure and the recourse profile up front.
- On a sale to a foreign buyer. If a block trade would push a foreign holder above the limit, the buyer universe and the structure are shaped accordingly.
- For a foreign borrower. A non-Indonesian shareholder financing a capped-sector position is structured with the limit in mind from the outset.
Custodian-held collateral, regardless
The custody mechanics are the same whether or not a limit applies. The borrower opens an account with the designated custodian, and the lender takes security over that account; the shares sit in that account in scripless, book-entry form, and beneficial ownership is preserved. The ownership cap, where it exists, sits on top of that mechanism — it governs who may end up holding the shares, not how they are held during the loan. Our glossary defines KSEI, C-BEST, and the SID in full.
The practical takeaway
For most borrowers, a foreign-ownership limit is a non-issue: their counter is uncapped, or they are an Indonesian holder financing an Indonesian-held position. Where a cap does apply, it is a structuring input to be identified early — not an obstacle. Any disclosure or regulatory obligations are a matter for your own Indonesian legal counsel, engaged in parallel; we act as arranger and introducer and do not provide legal or regulatory advice. See our stock loans overview for the related context.
This article is a general description and is not legal advice. Foreign-ownership limits and their application to a specific counter and structure are confirmed with qualified Indonesian counsel as part of each transaction.