Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/7c4197/indonesia_banking)
has announced the addition of the "Indonesia
Banking Industry: Outlook and Opportunities Assessment" report to
their offering.
Data and risk analysis for the planning and decision making needs of all
investors and service providers building their business strategy for
Indonesia's financial services industry today.
Indonesia is considered to be one of the most open markets for foreign
investors in Asia Pacific, but also viewed as one of the least
consolidated. Based on the considerable demand for a greater
understanding of the trends affecting the Indonesian banking industry
today, The Asian Banker is publishing a comprehensive report that is of
great importance to all decision makers assessing the banks in Indonesia.
The report reflects the publisher's extensive and continued interviews
with top regulators, CEOs and senior executives from the full
cross-section of banks in the country, as well as investors, suppliers
and consultants who do business with Indonesian banks. The report is
supported by a strong set of data, charts and tables that provide
conceptual insights, as well as hard-nosed facts that decision makers
can work into their own assessments.
The report provides a strong big picture perspective of the key themes
driving Indonesia's banking industry today, supported by strong
operational and business level observations that provides the reader
with an idea of the tactical issues they will need to deal with when
doing business in Indonesia.
The Asian Banker Industry Assessment Report on Indonesia assesses the
profile and prospects of the Indonesian banking industry, helps you
understand the drivers affecting the growth potential of the banking
industry in the country and learn the banks competitive positioning
relative to each other.
Key Topics Covered:
Chapter 1. Macroeconomic Environment
This chapter discusses the economic fundamentals that are relevant to
the banking industry in Indonesia today. The report looks at Indonesia's
GDP growth prospects, credit depth, efficiency of the financial system
and Indonesian consumer sentiment to evaluate the prospects for bank
lending growth. It identifies the sources of future growth as customer
sophistication and the revenue mix of banks evolve.
Chapter 2. Macro-Banking Environment
The second chapter provides an overview of the financial intermediation
business, both at the institutional level as well as balance sheet
levels of specific banks. Based on the strategies communicated to us by
leading CEOs, the report profiles how banks in Indonesia will play out
with the liquidity crunch and interest rate rise in the market today. It
uses the charts collated to draw a picture of motivations driving banks
to differentiate themselves in the marketplace and compete for market
share. It discusses ways in which both investors and service providers
should assess the institutional capability of Indonesian banks to focus
on profit.
Chapter 3. Business Composition and Operational Focus
This chapter is designed to give readers an insight into the business
composition of the banks themselves, down to the product level. The
report assesses how they will develop a good mix of businesses with good
tenures to strengthen their balance sheets. The report also looks at the
balance sheets and work out how the potential for fee-based income as
well as strong credit growth will play out. Based on the publisher's
interviews with leading figures in the Indonesian banking industry, it
also evaluates and segments the types of banks which are likely to come
to market for capital rising, and also the potential impact of foreign
players on the market.
Chapter 4. Distribution and Penetration
In this chapter the report looks at the state and future of channel
infrastructure, and examine the different strategies and technology
modernisation programs that are undertaken at branches and with the ATM
networks. It looks into the current state of fee generation capabilities
of branches to answer the question why is there a gap between aspiration
and implementation. It examines Indonesia's promising payment card
market, and investigate why having a strong credit card proposition is
not enough to succeed. ATM, cards and device manufacturers will find
this chapter and the data in the appendices useful in making their own
assessment for market entry.
Chapter 5-7. Major challenges, Key Concerns and Conclusions
We look into the major challenges for the banking industry as a whole,
and also for foreign and domestic players, in the wake of banking
consolidation and the transformation of domestic banks into modern sales
and customer orientated financial institutions. By identifying key areas
of concern in risk and asset management, performance and operations,
capital rising activities, distribution and penetration channels, It
brings together publisher's key findings in a unified and comprehensive
view for business applications and strategy discussions for the benefit
of investors, players in the marketplace, as well as service providers
and consultants wanting to serve the Indonesian banks. Readers will find
the publisher's key conclusions useful for their business decision
making needs.
8 Appendix: Indonesia Banking Data Series 2001-2005
The report is supported by a full range of latest available primary data
at the operational and business levels that decision makers will need
for making their own assessments. the report also makes the publisher's
own projections for the benefit of readers who need data for planning
purposes. Purchasers of the report may have access to the publisher's
research analysts on the use of this rich compendium of data.
Retail distribution:
ATMs (Number of networks, Number of machines, ATM penetration, Value
of ATM transactions, Average value per transaction, Volume of
transactions, Number of transactions/person)
EFTPOS (Number of networks, Number of terminals, EFTPOS penetration,
Value of EFTPOS transactions, Average value per transaction, Volume of
transactions, Number of transactions/person)
Bank branches (Number of branches, Branch penetration)
Infrastructure penetration rates (Fixed-line telephone, Mobile phones,
Personal computers, Internet) Payment systems
Cash (Cash penetration, Cash penetration as a % of GDP)
Credit cards (Number of cards, card penetration, Value of transactions
(US$ millions, per card, per person), Billing as a % of HH income,
Volume of transactions, Average value/transaction)
Debit cards (Number of cards, card penetration, Value of transactions
(US$ millions, per card, per person), Volume of transactions, Average
value/transaction)
Cheques (Value of transactions, Volume of transactions)
Financial profile:
Balance sheet (Total assets, Loans, Deposits, Equity, Non-performing
loans, NPLs as a % of total loans, NPLs as a % of GDP)
Income statement (Net interest revenue, Other operating income,
Overheads, Profits, Tier-1 capital)
Ratios (Operations: Return on average equity, Return on average
assets, Cost-to-income ratio, Net interest margins; Liquidity: Net
loans- to-total assets, Net loans-to-deposits; Capital:
Equity-to-total assets)
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/7c4197/indonesia_banking
Contact:Research and MarketsLaura Wood, Senior Managerpress@researchandmarkets.comU.S. Fax: 646-607-1907Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716
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