The Indonesian government reactivated its capital market in 1977. In 2007, Surabaya Stock Exchange merged with Jakarta Stock Exchange to become the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX). In its development, IDX continues to reform and refine the capital market supporting systems, facilities, and infrastructure, including the development of digital technology for the advancement of the Indonesian capital market.
Equity is the main instrument in the Indonesian capital market. Over the years, the domestic stock market has grown tremendously and the regulatory environment has improved. READ MORE
Similar Posts:
- Jakarta Composite Index Surpasses Key Psychological Benchmark on Political News (JP)
- Indonesia’s Smaller Cities Catching Eye of Startup Investors (Nikkei Asia)
- Indonesia to Jump on IPO Boom by Listing 14 State-owned Companies (Nikkei Asia)
- Indonesia’s Energy Pipeline Springs Leak as Chevron Eyes Exit (Nikkei Asia)
- Speculators And Hit-And-Runs: Investing in Indonesia
- BlackRock’s Swann: Look at the China Slowdown in a Long Term Context (FE Trustnet)
- Indonesia IPOs Surge Ahead, Defying Coronavirus Slump (Nikkei Asian Review)
- Fortune Magazine’s Best Emerging Markets to Invest in Now
- Investors Are Returning to Emerging Markets in Asia But Indonesia Looks Risky (CNBC)
- Forget China. These 3 Emerging Markets Are Better Bets. (Barron’s)
- Indonesian Conglomerate CT Corp Embarks on Journey Toward IPO (Nikkei Asia)
- Champ Resto (IDX: ENAK): Indonesia’s Restaurant National Champion?
- Emerging Market Stocks Advance on Reform Themes & Central Bank Expectations (Bloomberg)
- Asia-Pacific Equities Wait to Emerge From the Dollar’s Shadow (Robeco)
- Southeast Asian Tech Hubs Race to Become the Next Silicon Valley (Nikkei Asian Review)