This story appears in the December 2024 issue of Forbes Asia. Subscribe to Forbes Asia
Franky Widjaja, president commissioner of Dian Swastatika Sentosa.
Dimas Ardian/BloombergThis story is part of Forbes’ coverage of Indonesia’s Richest 2024. See the full list here.
The Widjaja family’s wealth soared 75% to $18.9 billion, fueled by a sevenfold jump in shares of Dian Swastatika Sentosa, the energy-to-infrastructure unit of their Sinar Mas group. Now the family’s biggest asset, Dian Swastatika, has lately been expanding its renewables and telecoms portfolio.
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Significant profit growth for non-coal businesses in 2023 helped drive investor enthusiasm, says Hendra Wardana, founder of Indonesian research firm Stocknow.id. While coal still accounted for the lion’s share of Dian Swastatika’s $5 billion revenue in 2023, sales were down 18% on weaker prices.
In September, Dian Swastatika said it would spend $400 million to develop two geothermal projects with the potential to generate over 80 megawatts. It’s also partnering with Korean tycoon Kim Nam-goo’s Korea Investment Real Asset Management to build a $300 million data center in Jakarta.
Separately, Sinar Mas concluded plans to merge its telecoms unit Smartfren with XL Axiata, the third-largest telecoms company in Indonesia by subscribers, in a deal valued at $6.5 billion. That will help the combined entity compete with bigger rivals: state-owned Telkomsel and Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison. The group’s property arm Sinar Mas Land is building a $1 billion special economic zone that includes schools and hospitals in BSD City, a mammoth 6,000-hectare district on the outskirts of Jakarta.