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Jakarta Post

Financial conglomerates will be monitored more thoroughly

The Financial Services Authority (OJK) will issue a new regulation later this year that will tighten up the monitoring of financial conglomerates as their risks have the potential to have a huge impact on the country’s overall financial system

Tassia Sipahutar (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Tue, April 15, 2014

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Financial conglomerates will be monitored more thoroughly

T

he Financial Services Authority (OJK) will issue a new regulation later this year that will tighten up the monitoring of financial conglomerates as their risks have the potential to have a huge impact on the country'€™s overall financial system.

The new rule, which is slated to be published in the third or fourth quarter of this year, will focus on the finances, risk management and good corporate governance of the conglomerates, including their subsidiaries, according to the head of OJK banking supervision department, Agus Siregar.

'€œThe financial aspect will cover each group'€™s CAR [capital adequacy ratio] and liquidity,'€ Agus said on Monday without elaborating further.

Thirty one financial conglomerates have been identified by the OJK, including Bank Mandiri, Bank Central Asia (BCA), Bank Rakyat Indonesia (BRI) and Panincorp. Collectively, they have assets amountingto Rp 9 quadrillion (US$786.88 billion) and make up more than 53 percent of Indonesia'€™s financial institutions.

State-owned Bank Mandiri has nine subsidiaries and is the largest financial conglomerate in the country. The subsidiaries businesses stretch from investment banking to insurance.

Meanwhile, Panincorp is currently listed as one of the shareholders of publicly listed Panin Insurance, which has a stake in Panin Financial, the latter holds 46 percent of Panin Bank'€™s shares. Panin Bank is now one of the top 10 biggest lenders by assets in Indonesia.

Agus said that the OJK would conduct three-layered supervision on every conglomerate, starting from each subsidiary until the parent company. In an effort to comply with the future regulation, the conglomerates will be required to submit their business plans to the authority before year-end, according to Agus.

'€œWe expect the conglomerates to submit business plans that cover their whole operations for 2015,'€ he added.

BCA president director Jahja Setiaatmadja said that the nation'€™s biggest private lender was not worried by the upcoming regulation, adding that the lender already complied with prudential banking practices.

'€œOur considerations involve credit risk, market risk and liquidity risk. We also monitor the growth of our subsidiaries and adjust it with our own capital strength,'€ he said on the sidelines of the same seminar.

BCA has five subsidiaries '€” automotive financing firm BCA Finance, Islamic lender BCA Syariah, securities firm BCA Sekuritas, general insurer Asuransi Umum BCA and money transfer firm BCA Finance Ltd. in Hong Kong. It is looking to expand its business coverage with the establishments of a brand new life insurer in 2014 and an asset management company in 2015.

Jahja claimed that its CAR, which stands at around 17.4 percent, was sufficient to guarantee the business sustainability of its subsidiaries and that it did not plan on injecting them with additional capital.

Indonesian banks are required to have a minimum CAR of 8 percent at present.

Similar to Jahja, BRI finance director Achmad Baiquni said that its 17 percent CAR as a group was more than enough to support the operations of BRI and its subsidiaries; BRISyariah, BRI Agro and BRI Remittance in Hong Kong.

Indonesia'€™s financial institutions include 120 commercial banks, 139 insurance firms, 199 financing companies and 20,328 investment managers.

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