Global Index Purge: FTSE Russell Demotes of Energy Giant DSSA, Compunding Institutional Shift for Indonesian Equities
Key Takeaways
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JAKARTA, Investortrust.id — Global institutional capital tracking Indonesian equities is facing another massive wave of portfolio adjustments following FTSE Russell’s latest quarterly review announcement. In its May 2026 index restructuring, the global index provider confirmed an aggressive trimming of Indonesian exposure, spearheaded by the complete removal of a prominent multi-sector energy giant from its blue-chip tier.
According to the official mandate issued by FTSE Russell, energy and infrastructure conglomerate PT Dian Swastatika Sentosa Tbk (DSSA) will be completely removed from the FTSE Large Cap Index. Reflecting a stricter liquidity and market capitalization threshold for Southeast Asia's largest economy, the international index compiler announced that no new Indonesian listings will be added to fill the vacancy left by DSSA's exit.
The operational timeline for the tracking adjustments is tightly compressed for institutional desks executing the transition. FTSE Russell stated in its formal announcement that the index rebalancing will dictate market positioning by the close of trading on Friday, June 19, 2026. The structural changes across global portfolios will officially become effective at the opening of the trading week on Monday, June 22, 2026.
This double-barreled index exclusion from FTSE and MSCI triggers an immediate risk of forced capital outflows as passive global funds mechanically dump these offloaded corporate shares. For global asset managers, this continuous trimming underscores a tightening liquidity filter for Indonesian equities, forcing international funds to reallocate capital into a narrower, hyper-liquid group of elite sovereign blue chips.
The institutional bleeding extends into the small-cap landscape, where FTSE Russell confirmed the simultaneous eviction of three notable listings from its Micro Cap Index. Newly listed logistics player PT DAAZ Bara Lestari Tbk (DAAZ), mining services firm PT Hillcon Tbk (HILL), and industrial glass manufacturer PT Asahimas Flat Glass Tbk (MLIA) are all scheduled for removal, with no additions joining the micro-cap benchmark.
Market analysts warn that this reshuffling will directly alter cross-border investment flows, forcing immediate tracking adjustments from global institutional funds that benchmark their portfolios against the FTSE Equity Index Series. The regulatory body has remained defensive, as the Financial Services Authority (OJK) recently welcomed positive feedback from FTSE Russell regarding Indonesia’s retained status as a Secondary Emerging Market, viewing it as a clear sign that Jakarta must aggressively accelerate local capital market reforms.
This FTSE pullback intensifies a broader institutional retreat that began earlier in the month when rival index compiler MSCI executed a drastic restructuring of its own global tracking benchmarks. In that sweeping May 2026 review, MSCI axed six major Indonesian corporations from its primary MSCI Global Standard Indexes, including copper giant PT Amman Mineral Internasional Tbk (AMMN), renewable energy titan PT Barito Renewables Energy Tbk (BREN), and petrochemical leader PT Chandra Asri Pacific Tbk (TPIA).
Despite the aggressive institutional pruning, an elite cluster of eleven Indonesian corporate giants successfully defended their territory within the MSCI Global Standard Indexes. This resilient sovereign cohort is anchored by the nation's core financial trio: PT Bank Central Asia Tbk (BBCA), PT Bank Rakyat Indonesia Tbk (BBRI), and PT Bank Mandiri Tbk (BMRI). Telecom provider PT Telkom Indonesia Tbk (TLKM) and automotive giant PT Astra International Tbk (ASII) also retained their critical tracking spots.
The remaining institutional strongholds successfully weathering the MSCI standard indexing cuts include energy play PT Barito Pacific Tbk (BRPT), state lender PT Bank Negara Indonesia Tbk (BBNI), and Charoen Pokphand Indonesia Tbk (CPIN). Food manufacturing titan PT Indofood Sukses Makmur Tbk (INDF), heavy machinery dealer PT United Tractors Tbk (UNTR), resource player PT Bumi Resources Minerals Tbk (BRMS), and Gojek Tokopedia Tbk (GOTO), the country’s largest tech conglomerate, rounded out the surviving list.
Concurrently, a separate tier of forty-three mid-tier Indonesian corporations managed to retain their positions within the MSCI Global Small Cap Indexes. This smaller enterprise group now includes retail giant PT Sumber Alfaria Trijaya Tbk (AMRT), which suffered a direct downgrade to the small-cap pool after being aggressively booted from MSCI's primary global standard list. Other entities fighting to stabilize fund flows within this small-cap bracket include coal producer ADRO, newly listed energy spin-off AADI, logistics player AKRA, state mortgage lender BBTN, e-commerce veteran BUKA, and mining contractor PTRO.

