📌 MAROKO133 Breaking startup: GoTo Pushes Profitability 📊, Kredivo Expands Abroad
Dear subscriber,
Good morning! This week brings another wave of encouraging developments across Indonesia’s digital ecosystem. Several homegrown companies are showing stronger maturity across Indonesia’s digital ecosystem. Fintech players like Kredivo are expanding regionally with its move into Vietnam, while digital banks such as Bank Jago and Superbank continue to gain momentum. Platform companies are also evolving their business models, with Bukalapak leaning into gaming-driven growth and GoTo progressing toward sustainable profitability. Meanwhile, sectors like beauty commerce, digital lending, proptech, and retail investing, represented by Sociolla, Akulaku, ERA, and Bareksa, continue to gain traction as Indonesia’s digital economy becomes increasingly diversified.
Alongside this growth, the ecosystem is also entering a new structural phase. New leadership at the financial regulator signals continued support for financial innovation, while cross-border capital from Korean investors and Southeast Asian venture funds reinforces Indonesia’s position as a key regional market. At the same time, the government is starting to reshape the youth internet through policies regulating AI use in schools and social media access for minors, pointing toward a more responsible and future-ready digital landscape.
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🚨 What’s New
Kredivo expands deeper into Southeast Asia.
Fintech platform Kredivo is strengthening its regional footprint after acquiring Vietnamese digital bank Timo, signaling a strategic push beyond Indonesia’s borders. The deal gives Kredivo access to Timo’s digital banking infrastructure and user base, allowing it to combine lending, payments, and banking services into a more integrated ecosystem. The move reflects a broader trend of Indonesian fintech companies scaling regionally as they mature. For Indonesia’s tech ecosystem, it highlights how local fintech players are evolving from domestic disruptors into regional financial platforms. The expansion also underscores growing investor confidence in Indonesian fintech models that can be exported to neighboring markets.
Korean tech investors continue betting on Indonesia’s growth story.
South Korean companies are increasing their investments in Indonesia as part of broader expansion into Southeast Asia’s digital economy. Korean firms are eyeing opportunities across sectors including digital infrastructure, manufacturing, and consumer technology. The continued inflow of capital from Korea reflects confidence in Indonesia’s large consumer base and rapidly digitizing economy. Cross-border partnerships like these often accelerate technology transfer and ecosystem development. For Indonesia, the trend reinforces its position as one of the region’s most strategic markets for global investors.
Bukalapak’s gaming segment drives strong revenue growth.
Bukalapak posted strong revenue expansion in 2025 as its strategy around digital goods and gaming continued to gain traction. The company recorded total revenue of about IDR 6.5 trillion, up 46% year-on-year, reflecting the growing contribution of its digital gaming marketplace and other online services. Gaming has become the largest revenue contributor, generating around IDR 5.3 trillion in FY2025 and highlighting the platform’s shift toward high-frequency digital transactions. This pivot toward digital goods has helped Bukalapak strengthen monetization while diversifying beyond traditional ecommerce.
Bank Jago continues to build momentum in Indonesia’s digital banking landscape.
Digital lender Bank Jago delivered another year of steady growth in 2025, driven by its ecosystem-based banking strategy and continued product innovation. The bank expanded its customer base to over 18 million users while strengthening engagement through the Jago App, which offers personalized financial management features such as customizable “Pockets” and foreign currency savings. Strong partnerships with digital platforms and financial institutions also supported loan growth and broader service adoption across Indonesia’s digital economy. Alongside rising deposits and lending activity, the bank reported net profit of Rp276 …
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🔗 Sumber: dailysocial.id
📌 MAROKO133 Hot startup: Data flows shift 🔄, venture debt rises 💳, AI momentum bui
Dear subscribers,
This week, we unpack a series of pivotal shifts shaping Indonesia’s digital landscape, from a new cross-border data agreement with the United States and evolving digital tax commitments, to the rise of venture debt as startups seek smarter capital strategies. At the same time, Telkom Indonesia is doubling down on data center expansion, reinforcing the country’s ambition to anchor more digital infrastructure domestically. Beyond policy and infrastructure, Southeast Asia is entering a defining phase in its AI journey as enterprises move from experimentation toward scaled implementation, positioning the region as a strategic battleground for global technology players.
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🚨 What’s New
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Indonesia and the United States have taken a decisive step in cross-border data governance.
Under a newly announced trade agreement between President Prabowo and President Trump, Indonesia agreed to allow limited transfers of personal data to the U.S., provided they comply with domestic data protection regulations. The move reduces regulatory ambiguity around cross-border digital operations and signals a stronger alignment with global data flow frameworks. For technology companies, cloud providers, and cross-border platforms, this creates clearer operational pathways while maintaining obligations under Indonesia’s Personal Data Protection Law. The development reflects Indonesia’s growing role in shaping digital trade diplomacy while balancing privacy safeguards.
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Alternative financing is gaining traction as venture debt emerges as a stronger funding option in Southeast Asia.
Qverse, a venture debt platform founded by regional ecosystem players, is expanding its strategy to include private credit and larger ticket sizes. Venture debt provides startups with non-dilutive capital, offering founders greater flexibility during market slowdowns and tighter equity funding cycles. The growing adoption of structured financing instruments signals a maturing startup ecosystem that is becoming more sophisticated in capital management. As founders prioritize sustainable growth over aggressive burn, diversified funding options are becoming increasingly strategic.
👏 What’s Exciting
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Telkom Indonesia is accelerating its data center ambitions as digital infrastructure becomes a national priority.
The state-backed telco, Telkom Indonesia is actively seeking global partners to expand capacity and strengthen its position in the regional data center market. With demand rising from hyperscalers, enterprise clients, and AI-driven workloads, scaling infrastructure has become a competitive necessity. The company is also reportedly revisiting plans to divest a stake in its data center business, signaling confidence in asset value and investor appetite. This move reinforces Indonesia’s strategic push to anchor more digital infrastructure domestically while attracting international capital.
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Digital taxation policy is entering a new chapter amid shifting global trade commitments. As part of the broader U.S.–Indonesia agreement, Indonesia is restricted from imposing discriminatory digital service taxes on major U.S. technology platforms. While the government maintains authority to implement fair and non-discriminatory taxation frameworks, the agreement provides greater regulatory certainty for global digital players operating locally. This clarity may enhance investment confidence and platform expansion within Indonesia’s digital economy. At the same time, policymakers will need to calibrate revenue strategies carefully within evolving international trade norms.
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At the India AI Impact Summit 2026, Indonesia pushed for AI development that delivers real societal value beyond technical innovation.
Deputy Minister of Communication and Digital Nezar Patria, Representatives from Indonesia emphasized that the impact of AI should be measured by how it improves public services and fosters equitable access, not just by technological sophistication. This shifts the narrative toward responsible and inclusive AI adoption, which aligns with Indonesia’s large, diverse population and its goal of leveraging digital tools to enhance education, healthcare, and economic opportunities for MSMEs and underserved communities. The message resonates within Indonesia’s broader digital policy framework that seeks to balance innovation with public benefit and underscores the country’s role as an active voice in shaping global tech governance.
🚀 What’s Next: Southeast Asia’s AI Inflection Point: Scaling Adoption, Unlocking Value
The latest industry analysis titled AI in Southeast Asia: An Era of Opportunity, published collaboratively by McKinsey & Company, the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB), and Tech in Asia, sho…
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🔗 Sumber: dailysocial.id
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