Invesco's Asia-Pacific Global Market Strategist David Chao indicated that the Indonesian stock market has recently experienced a significant pullback due to MSCI's consideration of downgrading Indonesia's status from an "emerging market" to a "frontier market." Market volatility in Indonesia is expected to persist until the local regulators respond and MSCI makes its final decision in May of this year. He stated that even after the recent price declines, Indonesian stock valuations are still not relatively cheap. The forward P/E ratio for the relevant index is near 11 times, while year-on-year earnings per share (EPS) growth for this year is only projected to be between 8% and 10%. Looking ahead over the next year, there is a stronger preference for North Asian equity markets, as they benefit from a more robust macroeconomic environment, the ongoing expansion of AI-related investments, and fiscal policy measures aimed at driving reflation. MSCI recently concluded its review of the Indonesian equity market, raising concerns about the exchange's disclosure rules, which it believes may permit opaque ownership structures and highly concentrated shareholding situations. This signifies MSCI's worry that, coupled with limited trading liquidity for many stocks, these conditions could lead to improper trading practices and overvalued assessments. MSCI has announced it will suspend some previously planned index adjustments. If Indonesia fails to make substantial progress in enhancing market transparency before May this year, MSCI will re-evaluate Indonesia's market accessibility status. Potential actions MSCI could take include: 1) reducing Indonesia's weighting within the emerging markets index; or 2) downgrading Indonesia from an emerging market to a frontier market. In a worst-case scenario, if such measures are implemented, the simulated free-float market capitalization of the MSCI Indonesia Index is projected to decrease by approximately $32 billion in the standard index and about $10 billion in the small-cap index, amounting to a total reduction of roughly 27%. If these adjustments are ultimately enacted, they could trigger significant outflows of passive investment funds.