Podcast
June 08 2026

Why Chinese capital keeps choosing Indonesia

Why this conversation

Chinese outbound investment has shifted shape over the past ten years. The old cycles were about resources and bilateral infrastructure projects. What is happening now is different. Chinese industrial and commercial presence is being deliberately repositioned offshore, pushed by geopolitics, a saturated home market, and a government that wants its companies abroad. ASEAN is where most of the capital lands. Within ASEAN, Indonesia is consistently first or second on every shortlist we see.

This page works through six questions with Jade Hwang, a foreign consultant at NDP who advises Chinese companies entering Indonesia. The aim is practical: what is pushing the wave, where the money goes, how deals are layered, and the regulatory and capital control risk a Chinese investor has to plan for.

Macro trendsSectorsDestinationStructuringRiskAuthority close
What is driving China’s outbound investment todayWhere the capital is goingWhy ASEAN, and Indonesia in particularHow Chinese companies structure their dealsRegulatory, capital control and geopolitical exposureHow Chinese digital platforms expand

What is driving China’s outbound investment strategy today, and how is it different from before?

Quick note

The wave is structural rather than a passing capital cycle. Geopolitics is the heaviest force at work. US-China trade tension and tariffs have pushed Chinese manufacturers and technology companies to build parallel operating capacity outside China, the China Plus One strategy. A fiercely competitive domestic market and a government push to internationalise add to it.

The earlier cycles of Chinese outbound investment were largely about resource acquisition and bilateral infrastructure. What is happening now is different in composition, motivation and structure. The escalation of the trade war from 2018, and its further intensification from 2025, has made concentration in China itself a strategic risk, so companies are deliberately diversifying their footprint to limit exposure to tariffs, sanctions and technology restrictions.

For Indonesia, the consequence is that this is not a trend to be timed. It is a durable repositioning, which means Chinese investors represent a well-funded, strategically motivated pool of counterparties that will keep showing up regardless of any single market’s short-term swings.

What this means in practice

  • The driver is geopolitical: trade tension and tariffs pushing capacity out of China.
  • China Plus One is a structural strategy, not a temporary adjustment.
  • A saturated domestic consumer market adds a commercial push toward overseas growth.
  • For Indonesia, this is sustained deal flow rather than a cycle to be timed.

This is not a cyclical trend. It is a strategic repositioning of Chinese industrial and commercial presence.

Jade Hwang · Foreign Consultant, NDP

Which sectors are attracting the most Chinese investment into ASEAN?

Quick note Three sectors lead. Consumer goods and branded products, as Chinese brands look beyond a saturated home market. Infrastructure and industrial manufacturing, with the EV and battery supply chain prominent inside that. And data centres, driven by data localisation rules and the offshore expansion of Chinese digital platforms.

Consumer goods. China’s domestic market is intensely competitive, and brands that built scale and product sophistication at home are now capable of competing abroad. ASEAN’s roughly 800 million people, with Indonesia’s expanding middle class at the centre, is the addressable base that justifies the move.

Infrastructure and industrial manufacturing. China holds world-class engineering and construction capability, and as Indonesia continues investing in physical infrastructure, Chinese firms participate both as contractors and as equity investors. The EV and nickel-battery supply chain has drawn some of the largest industrial commitments in the region. Data centres are the third and fastest-rising: data sovereignty rules require local storage, which turns local data infrastructure into a prerequisite for market entry rather than an optional add-on.

What this means in practice

  • Consumer goods. Chinese brands with domestic scale chasing an addressable ASEAN market.
  • Infrastructure and manufacturing. Engineering capability plus the EV and battery supply chain.
  • Data centres. Data localisation rules make local infrastructure a condition of entry.
  • All three connect back to China Plus One and to reducing tariff exposure on exports.

Why is ASEAN, and Indonesia in particular, a priority destination for Chinese capital?

Quick note Market size first. Indonesia is roughly 280 million people, the largest single market in ASEAN, with a young and growing middle class whose spending patterns echo China’s earlier growth years. A receptive government, the 2021 Positive Investment List, the OSS system, and a strategic nickel endowment complete the picture.

For a Chinese consumer, technology or industrial company seeking real international scale, Indonesia is close to necessary rather than optional. The demographic quality matters as much as the size: a young middle class, fast digital adoption, and a willingness to engage new brands.

Government receptiveness is the second factor. The 2021 Positive Investment List replaced the old Negative List and opened many sectors to full or majority foreign ownership, and the Online Single Submission system streamlined registration. Investment board data shows China has ranked among Indonesia’s top three foreign investors for five consecutive years. The third factor is resources: Indonesia holds a large share of the world’s nickel reserves, a critical EV battery input, which has pulled significant Chinese investment into nickel processing and the battery supply chain.

What this means in practice

  • Indonesia is the largest single market in ASEAN, around 280 million people.
  • The 2021 Positive Investment List and the OSS system signal an open posture.
  • China has been a top-three investor for five consecutive years.
  • A strategic nickel endowment anchors the EV and battery supply chain.

For Chinese companies seeking meaningful international scale, Indonesia is not optional. It is necessary.

Jade Hwang · Foreign Consultant, NDP

How do Chinese companies typically structure their cross-border deals into Indonesia?

Quick note Usually through a layered structure: an offshore holding entity, often Cayman or BVI, then a Singapore regional hub, then the Indonesian operating company, typically a PT PMA. The layering reflects ODI approval requirements and the value of a treaty-supported hub. A local joint venture partner is often added even where full foreign ownership is allowed.

The offshore layer exists partly because an entity already established outside China can move capital faster once funded, easing the ODI timing constraint. The Singapore hub adds treaty access and substance. The Indonesian operating company is then incorporated as a PT PMA, the foreign-owned limited liability company.

Two Indonesian features regularly surprise Chinese investors. The first is the two-tier board: a Board of Directors for operations and a Board of Commissioners for oversight, where Chinese companies are used to a single-board model. The second is minimum capital: under BKPM Regulation 5/2025, a PT PMA requires a total investment plan of IDR 10 billion, with a smaller portion deposited as paid-up capital at incorporation. A local JV partner remains valuable for market access, regulatory relationships and distribution, even where the law would permit full foreign ownership.

What this means in practice

  • The common chain is offshore holding, then Singapore hub, then PT PMA.
  • Offshore entities ease ODI timing; the hub adds treaty access and substance.
  • Indonesia’s two-tier board surprises companies used to a single-board model.
  • A local JV partner adds market access even where full foreign ownership is allowed.

What regulatory, capital control or geopolitical risks should Chinese investors weigh?

Quick note Three risk categories, and they have to be assessed together. Capital control risk from the Chinese side through the ODI approval process. Host-country regulatory risk inside Indonesia. And geopolitical risk, since Chinese investment in sensitive sectors draws more scrutiny.

Capital controls. Outbound investment of meaningful scale needs ODI approval, involving the NDRC, MOFCOM and SAFE. The process is sensitive to policy priorities and can be slow for strategic sectors such as technology, media and financial services, which is why the timing uncertainty must sit inside deal planning. Offshore entities are often used to manage this, but they must be genuinely maintained, or they risk being treated as devices to circumvent the ODI regime.

Host-country regulation. Despite the Positive Investment List, restrictions remain, alongside minimum investment thresholds, data localisation in regulated sectors, and the two-tier board. Chinese companies are often less familiar with these than European or American counterparts, which creates avoidable compliance gaps. Geopolitics adds a final layer: national security scrutiny of Chinese capital in data, telecoms and infrastructure, and the second-order risk of Indonesian operations being caught in broader supply chain conflict.

What this means in practice

  • ODI approval introduces timing uncertainty that must be planned for, especially in sensitive sectors.
  • Offshore entities must be genuinely maintained, not treated as ODI workarounds.
  • Indonesia’s sector caps, capital thresholds and data localisation rules create avoidable compliance gaps.
  • Geopolitical scrutiny of Chinese capital is sharpest in data, telecoms and infrastructure.

How are Chinese fintech and digital companies expanding into the region?

https://youtu.be/hAgKoUfj1kQ

Quick note Through ecosystem replication. Major Chinese platforms are transplanting the super-app and marketplace model into ASEAN and adapting it locally. Entry runs via local partnership, a lead-then-acquire approach, or direct acquisition, the clearest Indonesian example being TikTok Shop’s acquisition of Tokopedia. A fragmented regional regulatory landscape is the main constraint.

The dominant model is to recreate the integrated platform that worked in China rather than enter with a single product. Entry methods vary: partnering with an established local player to use its user base and licences, expanding independently before acquiring a suitable target, or a direct strategic acquisition. Beyond e-commerce, Chinese fintech players have taken positions in Indonesian digital lending, payments and insurance aggregators, sometimes through offshore structures that obscure beneficial ownership, which has itself become a focus for the financial regulator, OJK.

The headwinds are structural. ASEAN’s digital governance is fragmented, with each country running its own data protection law, fintech licensing and content rules. Indonesia adds data localisation in regulated sectors and beneficial ownership disclosure. The platforms that enter with a compliance-first mindset navigate this far better than those that try to move fast and adjust afterwards.

What this means in practice

  • The model is ecosystem replication, not single-product entry.
  • Entry runs via local partnership, lead-then-acquire, or direct acquisition, as with TikTok Shop and Tokopedia.
  • OJK scrutinises beneficial ownership behind offshore-held fintech positions.
  • A fragmented regional regulatory landscape rewards a compliance-first approach.

Companies that enter with a compliance-first mindset navigate these requirements far more successfully than those that try to move fast and adjust later.

Jade Hwang · Foreign Consultant, NDP

Practical & regulatory

The two-sided regulatory picture.

A Chinese investment into Indonesia answers to two regimes at once. On the China side, outbound capital runs through the ODI approval process. On the Indonesian side, the corporate vehicle is the PT PMA under the Company Law (No. 40/2007), licensed through the OSS system, with foreign ownership governed by the 2021 Positive Investment List.

NDRC, MOFCOM & SAFEBKPM
The China-side authorities for Overseas Direct Investment approval and foreign exchange clearance.Indonesia’s investment board: foreign investment coordination and OSS RBA licensing.

The detail that catches employers

Indonesia governs differently from China.

Three structural features of Indonesian corporate law repeatedly surprise companies used to a single-board model and a domestic-only compliance regime.

Two boardsIDR 10 billionLKPM reporting
A Board of Directors for operations and a Board of Commissioners for oversight, under Law No. 40/2007.Total PT PMA investment plan under BKPM Regulation 5/2025, a portion deposited as paid-up capital.Periodic activity reporting to BKPM; failure can suspend or revoke the business licence.

Practical sequence, before the first hire

Step oneStep twoStep three
Plan ODI approval early, building the timing uncertainty into the deal calendar.Screen the Positive Investment List for the sector, and confirm the holding structure has treaty access and substance.Incorporate the PT PMA with a compliant two-tier board, and set up ongoing LKPM reporting from day one.

Key takeaways

Six things to carry into the investment plan.

The conversation in compressed form, for a Chinese investor or adviser planning an entry into Indonesia.

01 – The wave is structural

China Plus One is a durable repositioning, not a cycle. Chinese investment into Indonesia will persist regardless of short-term market swings.

02 – Three sectors lead

Consumer goods, infrastructure and manufacturing, and data centres. Each connects back to scale, tariff exposure and data sovereignty.

03 – Indonesia is the anchor market

The largest market in ASEAN, a receptive government, and a strategic nickel endowment keep it at the centre of the regional story.

04 – Deals are layered

Offshore holding, Singapore hub, PT PMA. The structure answers to ODI timing and the value of a treaty-supported, substance-backed hub.

05 – Two regimes, not one

A Chinese investment answers to ODI approval on one side and Indonesian regulation on the other. Both belong in the plan from the start.

06 – Compliance-first wins

In a fragmented regional landscape, the platforms and investors that lead with compliance navigate it far better than those that adjust later.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers to the questions Chinese investors raise most often.

What is driving Chinese outbound investment today?

The current wave is structural rather than cyclical. Geopolitics carries the most weight. US-China trade tension and tariffs have pushed Chinese manufacturers to build parallel capacity outside China, the China Plus One strategy. Intense competition in the domestic consumer market and a government-backed internationalisation push add to it.

Which sectors attract the most Chinese investment into ASEAN?

Three lead. Consumer goods and branded products, as Chinese brands look for scale beyond a saturated domestic market. Infrastructure and industrial manufacturing, including the EV and battery supply chain. And data centres, driven by data localisation requirements and the global expansion of Chinese digital platforms.

Why is Indonesia a priority destination for Chinese capital?

Market size first. Indonesia is roughly 280 million people, the largest single market in ASEAN, with a young and growing middle class. A receptive government, the 2021 Positive Investment List, the OSS system, and a strategic nickel endowment for EV batteries reinforce it. China has ranked among Indonesia’s top three foreign investors for five consecutive years.

How do Chinese companies structure investments into Indonesia?

Commonly through a layered structure: an offshore holding entity, often Cayman or BVI, then a Singapore regional hub, then the Indonesian operating company, usually a PT PMA. The layering reflects ODI approval requirements and the value of a treaty-supported, substance-backed hub. A local joint venture partner is often added even where full foreign ownership is allowed.

What is ODI approval and why does it matter?

Overseas Direct Investment approval is required for outbound investment at meaningful scale from China, involving the NDRC, MOFCOM and SAFE. The process can be slow and is sensitive to policy priorities, particularly for strategic sectors, so the timing uncertainty has to be built into deal planning.

Is Chinese investment in Indonesia slowing because of US-China tension?

The evidence points the other way. US-China tension is accelerating Chinese manufacturing investment into ASEAN, including Indonesia, as companies diversify production away from China. China Plus One is a durable structural strategy rather than a temporary adjustment.

How do Chinese digital platforms expand into Indonesia?

Through ecosystem replication: transplanting the super-app and marketplace model and adapting it locally. Entry runs via local partnerships, a lead-then-acquire approach, or direct acquisition, with TikTok Shop’s acquisition of Tokopedia as the clearest Indonesian example. A fragmented regional regulatory landscape and OJK beneficial ownership scrutiny are the main headwinds.

More from In Practice

Four further conversations on doing business in Indonesia.

01. Employment Law & Compliance RealitySri Wahyu Ningsih on the obligations foreign employers underestimate

02. China Outbound Investment Strategy – Jade Hwang on where Chinese capital is heading and how it is structured

03. Real Estate, Leasing & Property Structuring – Jade Hwang on what a foreign company can own, lease and risk

04. Cross-Border M&A & Investment Structuring – NDP and PB Taxand on how deals into Indonesia are executed