Indonesia’s financial watchdog, the OJK (Otoritas Jasa Keuangan), has fined and suspended PT Kay Hian Sekuritas (formerly PT UOB Kay Hian Sekuritas), the Indonesia unit of UOB Kay Hian, from underwriting new listings after discovering due diligence breaches and improper share allocation practices during an initial public offering. The brokerage was fined 250 million rupiah (approximately S$18,000) and its operating licence was suspended for one year, according to OJK’s February statement and subsequent disclosures.
PT Kay Hian Sekuritas served as the underwriter for property developer PT Repower Asia Indonesia, which went public in 2019. Recent investigations by OJK revealed that before trading began, shares reserved for independent investors were allocated to eight individuals who had declared in their bank account opening documents that they were employees of the issuing company. OJK also found that the stock purchase was funded by Singapore-based UOB Kay Hian Credit, an affiliate of PT Kay Hian Sekuritas.
An OJK source described this arrangement as a “coordinated backdoor financing structure.” According to the source, quoted by The Straits Times on April 10: “When an underwriter allows a company’s own staff to buy shares using funds directly loaned by an affiliate of the underwriter, it compromises the integrity of a public offering and creates a false sense of market demand. The aim of the underwriters is to create an impression that there is ample organic investor interest when, in reality, the shares were tightly controlled by what is called insider networks.”
OJK determined that PT Kay Hian Sekuritas held a position to identify inconsistencies in the employment information submitted via its affiliate but failed to do so. The use of inaccurate information led to breaches of Indonesia’s capital market regulations governing due diligence and share allocation procedures. OJK noted in its February statement that there are strict rules governing IPO shares allocations for insiders to ensure market fairness.
OJK chief Friderica Widyasari Dewi has pledged to strengthen surveillance and law enforcement, enhance transparency in stocks beneficiary ownership data, and improve governance across market participants. In a recent presentation to foreign journalists in Jakarta, Dewi called the fine on PT Kay Hian Sekuritas “a big amount,” stating: “We want to show everyone that we are very serious about this. We see market manipulation as a very serious issue.”
PT Kay Hian Sekuritas did not respond to requests for comment from The Straits Times.
This enforcement action is part of a broader effort by Indonesian authorities to tighten oversight of capital markets following a volatile period. Earlier in 2024, concerns raised by global index provider MSCI about market transparency triggered a sharp sell-off in Indonesian stocks. Authorities have since launched multiple investigations into IPO practices and trading activity.
Analysts view the regulatory action positively. S&P Global Ratings banking analyst Ivan Tan stated that Indonesia’s tougher regulatory posture would encourage more stringent compliance standards, which could “bolster both domestic and foreign investor confidence in the country’s capital markets.” Fitch Ratings director Roy Purnomo added: “The (regulatory) actions, if consistent, should improve transparency regarding share ownership going forward. It should also improve the quality of new IPOs.”
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