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Investors Dump Indonesia Stocks as Prabowo Flexes Market Muscles

(Bloomberg) -- An unprecedented accumulation of power in Indonesia’s corporate landscape is fueling investor concern about political influence and transparency in Southeast Asia’s biggest equity market.

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Newly launched sovereign wealth fund Danantara — which has a direct reporting line to President Prabowo Subianto — announced last month it would take over management of seven state-owned enterprises. Its holdings include three of the nation’s biggest banks, with total assets of more than $340 billion. Worries about the deal sent shares tumbling by the most in weeks, pressuring a stock market that’s already one of the world’s worst performers this year.

While sovereign wealth funds are commonplace across Asia, the swift consolidation of assets is offering investors an early glimpse into Prabowo’s vision for economic governance just months after he took office. The fund would control firms that make up more than one-fifth of the benchmark Jakarta Stock Exchange Composite Index. Plans for Danantara to eventually take in all of the dozens of state-owned firms would mean direct control of assets equaling roughly half of the country’s gross domestic product.

“Uncertainty over the new government’s policies, in particular the formation of Danantara, could keep investors away for now,” Selvie Jusman, an analyst at Morgan Stanley, wrote in a recent note.

The upheaval comes at a critical time. Since hitting a fresh record in September, Indonesia’s $700 billion stock market has stumbled as a stronger dollar and global trade tensions send investors fleeing from emerging markets. The JCI is down 6% this year, underperforming most global peers. Last month, the rupiah touched a five-year low as a weakening economy drags on the currency.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. downgraded the nation’s stocks to market weight from overweight on concerns about weaker earnings, domestic policy risks including SOE bank profitability and a wider fiscal deficit, they said in a note late Friday.

Danantara, or Daya Anagata Nusantara Investment Management Agency, will have initial capital of $20 billion and eventually have more than $900 billion in assets under management, according to Prabowo, putting it among the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds. The president has indicated that funding will come from a mix of budget cuts and increased state firm dividends.