Metro Pacific Tollways Corporation (MPTC), a subsidiary of Manuel V. Pangilinan-controlled conglomerate Metro Pacific Investments Corporation (MPIC), needs to raise about $600 million if its bid to invest in a major tollway company in Indonesia is successful.
In a virtual briefing, MPTC Chief Finance Officer Christopher C. Lizo said the company is participating in a bid to acquire a 35 percent stake in Indonesia’s Jasamarga Transjawa Tol.

Jasamarga Transjawa is a unit of Indonesia’s PT Jasa Marga Tbk, which operates 35 toll road concessions spanning 1,809 kilometers.
Established in 2017, Jasamarga Transjawa Tol operates toll roads in West Java, Central Java and East Java, totalling 13 concessions and span 676 kilometers, and about 56 percent of of the Jasa Marga Group portfolio.
It is in the process of offering a minority stake in the company to interested bidders which include Indonesia’s own Indonesia Investment Authority (INA).
MPTC is joining the bid in partnership with Singapore’s GIC Pte. Ltd. which had also acquired 33 percent of MPTC’s Indonesian operating unit, PT Margautama Nusantara earlier this month.
Lizo said the consortium is in the middle of doing the due diligence for Jasamarga Transjawa in time for the submission of a final bid by Jan. 15 next year but, at this point, the consortium is already valuing the stake at about $1 billion.
“So that's ($600 million) our anticipated participation in the project to get ready together with GIC our partner, it’s about $1 billion to $1.2 billion,” Lizo said.
He noted that, they expect the bidding to close by the first quarter of next year.
If successful in their bid, Jasamarga Transjawa will be the latest addition to MPTC’s Indonesia portfolio after it signed with the concession agreement last October for the development and operation of the $1.4 billion, 2x2 lanes, Jakarta Outer Ring (JORR) elevated toll road project that will span 21.5 kilometers.
MPTC earlier said that Indonesia comprises the bulk of the company’s portfolio, attracting 1.4 million in traffic daily, compared to the Philippines’ 600,000.