Jakarta · Institutional financing against IDX-listed equity

What Is an Indonesia Stock Loan?

An answer-first guide to share-backed financing on the Indonesia Stock Exchange — how the pledge works, what you keep, who uses it, and how it compares to selling, margin lending, and unsecured bank debt.

An Indonesia stock loan is financing secured by pledging shares listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX / Bursa Efek Indonesia). The shareholder receives cash while keeping ownership, dividends, and upside, and recovers the shares on repayment of the loan. Because the shares are pledged rather than sold, the position remains registered to the holder and returns in full once the principal and accrued interest are settled.

Key takeaways

  • A stock loan extracts capital from a position without removing you from it — the shares are collateral, not a sale.
  • You typically keep beneficial ownership, dividends, and the full economic upside for the life of the loan.
  • Your shares are held in your own securities sub-account in scripless, book-entry form at KSEI (C-BEST); the lender's security comes from its rights over that account, with custody arrangements suited to the structure.
  • The advance is sized by a loan-to-value (LTV) ratio that reflects the share's liquidity, volatility, free float, and concentration.
  • The principal risk is a margin call if the share price falls materially; terms should be modelled against realistic scenarios before drawdown.

How an Indonesia stock loan works

At its core, a stock loan is a secured-credit transaction. The shareholder pledges a defined number of IDX-listed shares to a lender, who advances cash against that collateral. The size of the advance is governed by the loan-to-value (LTV) ratio — the proportion of the position's market value released as principal. LTV is not a fixed number; it varies materially with the liquidity, volatility, free float, and shareholder concentration of the specific ticker.

Your shares stay in your own securities sub-account and are held in scripless, book-entry form at the Indonesian Central Securities Depository (KSEI) in the C-BEST system, where IDX-listed securities sit. The lender's security comes from its rights and control over that account — not from transferring the shares — so the shareholder's beneficial ownership is preserved throughout. Loans run for a defined tenor — commonly a fixed term with renewal options — over which interest accrues. Recourse arrangements (whether the lender's remedy is limited to the pledged shares or extends to the borrower personally) are agreed up front and shape both pricing and risk. For a step-by-step view, see our process and the dedicated stock loans page.

What you keep, compared with a sale

The defining feature of a stock loan is that it is not a disposal. A sale converts shares to cash permanently: the holder leaves the register, surrenders future upside, may crystallise tax, and — for a sizeable stake — can trigger disclosure and control consequences. A stock loan extracts only the capital. The shareholder keeps the shares, retains dividend entitlement and the economic upside, and recovers the full position on repayment. The transaction is, by design, reversible.

Stock loan vs. selling your shares
OutcomeStock loanOutright sale
Keep ownershipYes — shares pledged, not transferredNo — ownership passes to the buyer
Keep upsideYes — full economic exposure retainedNo — future gains forgone
DividendsRetained (subject to structure)Lost from settlement onward
Triggers disclosureAssessed case by case; often less intrusiveDisposals crossing thresholds are reportable
ReversibleYes — shares return on repaymentNo — permanent
Raises cashYes — sized by LTVYes — full proceeds, minus costs

Who uses Indonesia stock loans

Stock loans suit holders of concentrated, long-term positions who want liquidity without dismantling what they have built. Typical users include:

  • Founders and entrepreneurs with a large stake in the company they took public, who need capital for a new venture, diversification, or personal liquidity without signalling a sale of their flagship holding.
  • Controlling families and family offices managing intergenerational wealth, where retaining the holding — and its voting weight — is a strategic priority.
  • Listed corporates and substantial shareholders seeking to monetise a strategic cross-holding or treasury position while preserving the relationship it represents.

In each case the common thread is the same idea the whole platform is built on: you should not have to sell what you spent years building to access its value.

What shares qualify as collateral

Not every IDX-listed line is equally financeable. Eligibility is assessed case by case, with weight given to free float (the freely tradable proportion of shares), average daily trading value (ADTV), market capitalisation, sector, and shareholder concentration. A liquid LQ45 constituent with deep daily turnover supports a different structure to a thinly traded Development Board growth company.

The sector matters too. Banking, media, and certain other industries carry foreign-ownership limits under the Positive Investment List, which shape how a position held by — or sold to — a foreign party can be financed. Our glossary defines these terms in full, and our insight on foreign ownership limits explains how they interact with an Indonesia stock loan.

Costs and risks — a balanced view

A stock loan is a credit instrument, and it carries real risk that deserves a clear-eyed view. Interest accrues over the tenor and is the headline cost; pricing reflects the liquidity and volatility of the collateral as much as prevailing rates. The most material risk is a margin call: if the pledged share falls significantly, the LTV rises, and the lender may require additional collateral or partial repayment to restore cover.

If a margin call is not met, the lender may exercise its remedy and conduct a forced sale of pledged shares — potentially at an unfavourable price and, for a concentrated line, with market impact. Concentrated or illiquid positions amplify this enforcement risk. None of this makes a stock loan unsuitable; it makes structuring decisive. Conservative LTV, realistic price-scenario modelling, and clarity on recourse and margin mechanics are what separate a sound facility from a fragile one. See our FAQ and the note on Indonesian disclosure mechanics for related detail.

Stock loan vs. margin loan

Both are secured by securities, but they serve different purposes. A margin loan is a brokerage facility used chiefly to buy more securities, secured against a diversified portfolio with standardised maintenance rules. A stock loan is purpose-built financing against a specific, often concentrated shareholding, arranged to tolerate that concentration.

Stock loan vs. margin loan
FeatureStock loanMargin loan
CollateralA specific, often single-name listed holdingA diversified brokerage portfolio
Who lendsA specialist arranger or private lenderA securities firm or broker
Typical useLiquidity against a strategic stakeBuying additional securities (leverage)
Recourse / margin behaviourNegotiated; structured around the positionStandardised maintenance margin and calls
Concentration toleranceHigh — concentration is the normLow — penalised or excluded

Stock loan vs. unsecured bank loan

An unsecured bank loan rests on the borrower's covenant and credit profile; a stock loan rests on the pledged shares. That difference flows through to speed, sizing, and the conditions attached.

Stock loan vs. unsecured bank loan
FeatureStock loanUnsecured bank loan
SecuritySecured by pledged listed sharesUnsecured — rests on credit standing
SpeedOften faster once collateral is reviewedSlower; full credit underwriting
Size vs shareholdingScales with the value of the positionBounded by income and balance sheet
CovenantsCentred on collateral value and LTVFinancial and operating covenants
Pricing basisCollateral liquidity and volatilityBorrower credit risk and base rates

How to get started

The path is deliberately short and discreet. A confidential enquiry sets out the high-level details of your position; preliminary indicative terms — including an indicative LTV — typically follow within a few business days. Documentation, the KSEI pledge, and funding proceed from there, with a principal involved throughout. Read the full process, review the stock loans overview, or contact us to begin a confidential conversation.

Frequently asked questions

01Is an Indonesia stock loan the same as selling my shares?
No. A sale removes you from the position permanently and may crystallise tax, trigger disclosure, and surrender control. A stock loan extracts only the capital: you pledge the shares as collateral, keep beneficial ownership and upside, and recover the full holding when the loan is repaid.
02Do I keep dividends and voting on pledged shares?
Typically yes, subject to the structure agreed. In most Indonesia stock loans the shareholder retains beneficial ownership, dividend entitlement, and — depending on custody mechanics — voting rights, because the shares are pledged as security rather than sold. The precise treatment is set out in the loan and pledge documentation.
03Which Indonesian shares can be used as collateral?
Eligibility is assessed case by case. Relevant factors include free float, average daily trading value, market capitalisation, sector, shareholder concentration, and any foreign-ownership limit applying to the counter. Both IDX Main Board and selected Development Board equities are considered. See our glossary for definitions.
04What are the main risks of an Indonesia stock loan?
The principal risks are price-driven. If the pledged share falls materially, the LTV rises and the lender may issue a margin call requiring additional collateral or partial repayment; if unmet, the lender may sell pledged shares to restore cover. Interest accrues over the tenor, and concentrated or illiquid positions carry greater enforcement risk. Terms should be modelled against realistic price scenarios before drawdown.

Considering a stock loan against your IDX position?

A confidential conversation begins with one message. A senior principal will reply — usually within one business day.