Phintraco Sekuritas adalah Perusahaan Sekuritas, Anggota Bursa Efek Indonesia yang menyediakan layanan Perantara Pedagang Efek dan Penjamin Emisi Efek. Phintraco Sekuritas berhasil meraih 8 Rekor MURI dan memiliki jaringan yang luas di Indonesia dengan Kantor Cabang dan Galeri Investasi tersebar dari Aceh hingga Papua.
Investor
Kantor Cabang
Galeri Investasi
Divisi Institutonal Brokerage siap memberikan pelayanan kepada perusahaan atau lembaga yang tertarik untuk berinvestasi.
Selengkapnya
Phintraco Sekuritas juga memiliki layanan Investment Banking yang dapat membantu memenuhi kebutuhan Perusahaan Anda.
SelengkapnyaIn music, art, and activism, trans voices are now leading. From the punk rock of Against Me!’s Laura Jane Grace to the poetic fury of Alok Vaid-Menon, trans artists are not just asking for a seat at the table—they are rebuilding the house. They remind LGBTQ culture that queerness was never about assimilation; it was about transformation.
LGBTQ culture, as we know it today, was born in the margins. From the drag performers of Prohibition-era speakeasies to the butch lesbians and effeminate gay men who refused to conform to gender norms, the blurring of gender lines has always been present. Yet, for decades, the “T” in LGBTQ was often treated as an afterthought—an asterisk to the gay and lesbian rights movement. The reality, however, is that transgender people, particularly trans women of color like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, were on the frontlines of the 1969 Stonewall uprising, throwing bricks that would echo through history.
To separate the transgender community from LGBTQ culture would be to remove the heartbeat from the body. The trans community is not a subcategory of queer life—it is its conscience, its memory of rebellion, and its most vivid proof that identity is not something you discover, but something you dare to create.
Yet the relationship is not without tension. In some corners of LGBTQ culture, trans exclusion has surfaced—whether through lesbian separatist movements rejecting trans women, or gay men’s spaces that historically dismissed transmasculine identities. More recently, debates over “rapid-onset gender dysphoria” and the role of conversion therapy have tested alliances. These fractures reveal that even within a marginalized community, hierarchies of “authenticity” can persist.
This symbiosis is evident in shared language and spaces. The rainbow flag, designed by Gilbert Baker, includes stripes representing “sex” and “magic,” but trans-specific symbols—the light blue, pink, and white transgender pride flag—now fly alongside it at every major Pride march. The culture’s lexicon, from “coming out” to “chosen family,” originated in gay and lesbian contexts but has been refined and deepened by trans experiences of transition and self-reclamation.
Nevertheless, the larger arc bends toward solidarity. As anti-trans legislation surges globally, the broader LGBTQ culture has increasingly recognized that an attack on trans healthcare, bathroom access, or drag performance is an attack on queer existence itself. The fight against gender policing is the same fight that has always defined LGBTQ culture: the right to love and live beyond the binary.
On June 19-21, 2025, Phintraco Sekuritas continued to participate in the Sharia Investment Week (SIW) event held by the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX).
The IDX, along with the Indonesian Clearing House of Guarantors (KPEI) and the Indonesian Central Depository and Settlement Institution (KSEI), supported by the Financial Services Authority (OJK), regularly organizes SIW to help the Indonesian people learn more about the Sharia Capital Market. Annually, SIW is attended by members of the Sharia Online Trading System (AB SOTS), with Phintraco Sekuritas being one of them.
During the 3-day SIW 2025 event, customers and prospective customers can attend in person at the IDX Main Hall or online via the SIW website at https://siw.idx.co.id/. The high enthusiasm of customers and prospective customers has made the Phintraco Sekuritas booth at SIW 2025 always crowded with visitors seeking information about sharia investment, both offline and online. Prospective customers who open an account at Phintraco Sekuritas will receive a free RDN worth IDR 25,000 exclusively during SIW 2025.
Then, after the new customer opens a sharia account, they will be entitled to participate in a dart game with various attractive prizes. If they win a certain score, customers can get attractive snacks, prayer mats, and even exclusive tumblers. Therefore, the presence of Phintraco Sekuritas at SIW 2025 is always eagerly awaited by customers and prospective customers.
Source: Company Documentation
However, even though SIW 2025 has ended, Phintraco Sekuritas is ready to participate in the next SIW with a variety of exciting activities and the newest information. Stay tuned for SIW 2026 on the IDX or Phintraco Sekuritas social media accounts at @phintracosekuritasofficial. cute ass shemale
Writer: Yundira Putri Rahmadianti
Editor: Salsabila Wardhani
Tanggal 19 hingga 21 Juni 2025 lalu, Phintraco Sekuritas kembali mengikuti event Sharia Investment Week (SIW) yang diadakan oleh Bursa Efek Indonesia (BEI).
Diselenggarakan secara rutin oleh BEI yang bekerja sama bersama Kliring Penjamin Efek Indonesia (KPEI) dan Kustodian Sentral Efek Indonesia (KSEI) dengan dukungan Otoritas Jasa Keuangan (OJK), SIW bertujuan untuk meningkatkan literasi Pasar Modal Syariah masyarakat Indonesia menjadi lebih luas. Sehingga setiap tahunnya SIW dihadiri oleh Anggota Bursa Sharia Online Trading System (AB SOTS) dan Phintraco Sekuritas merupakan salah satunya.
Di SIW 2025 yang berlangsung selama 3 hari ini, nasabah dan calon nasabah dapat hadir secara luring ke Main Hall BEI ataupun secara daring melalui website SIW di laman https://siw.idx.co.id/. Tingginya antusiasme dari nasabah dan calon nasabah membuat booth Phintraco Sekuritas di SIW 2025 selalu ramai dikunjungi untuk mendapatkan informasi seputar investasi syariah baik secara luring dan daring, calon nasabah yang melakukan pembukaan akun di Phintraco Sekuritas akan mendapatkan hadiah RDN senilai Rp25.000 secara gratis khusus selama SIW 2025 berlangsung. In music, art, and activism, trans voices are now leading
Kemudian setelah nasabah baru melakukan pembukaan akun syariah, maka akan berhak mengikuti permainan dart dengan beragam hadiah menarik. Jika memenangkan skor tertentu, nasabah bisa mendapatkan camilan menarik, sajadah, hingga tumbler eksklusif. Sehingga kehadiran Phintraco Sekuritas di SIW 2025 selalu ditunggu setiap harinya oleh nasabah dan calon nasabah.
Meski SIW 2025 telah berakhir, namun Phintraco Sekuritas siap untuk hadir di SIW selanjutnya dengan beragam keseruan dan informasi terbaru lainnya. Nantikan SIW 2026 di sosial media BEI atau Phintraco Sekuritas di @phintracosekuritasofficial.
Penulis: Yundira Putri Rahmadianti
Editor: Dhira Parama Yuga
In music, art, and activism, trans voices are now leading. From the punk rock of Against Me!’s Laura Jane Grace to the poetic fury of Alok Vaid-Menon, trans artists are not just asking for a seat at the table—they are rebuilding the house. They remind LGBTQ culture that queerness was never about assimilation; it was about transformation. LGBTQ culture, as we know it today, was born in the margins
LGBTQ culture, as we know it today, was born in the margins. From the drag performers of Prohibition-era speakeasies to the butch lesbians and effeminate gay men who refused to conform to gender norms, the blurring of gender lines has always been present. Yet, for decades, the “T” in LGBTQ was often treated as an afterthought—an asterisk to the gay and lesbian rights movement. The reality, however, is that transgender people, particularly trans women of color like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, were on the frontlines of the 1969 Stonewall uprising, throwing bricks that would echo through history.
To separate the transgender community from LGBTQ culture would be to remove the heartbeat from the body. The trans community is not a subcategory of queer life—it is its conscience, its memory of rebellion, and its most vivid proof that identity is not something you discover, but something you dare to create.
Yet the relationship is not without tension. In some corners of LGBTQ culture, trans exclusion has surfaced—whether through lesbian separatist movements rejecting trans women, or gay men’s spaces that historically dismissed transmasculine identities. More recently, debates over “rapid-onset gender dysphoria” and the role of conversion therapy have tested alliances. These fractures reveal that even within a marginalized community, hierarchies of “authenticity” can persist.
This symbiosis is evident in shared language and spaces. The rainbow flag, designed by Gilbert Baker, includes stripes representing “sex” and “magic,” but trans-specific symbols—the light blue, pink, and white transgender pride flag—now fly alongside it at every major Pride march. The culture’s lexicon, from “coming out” to “chosen family,” originated in gay and lesbian contexts but has been refined and deepened by trans experiences of transition and self-reclamation.
Nevertheless, the larger arc bends toward solidarity. As anti-trans legislation surges globally, the broader LGBTQ culture has increasingly recognized that an attack on trans healthcare, bathroom access, or drag performance is an attack on queer existence itself. The fight against gender policing is the same fight that has always defined LGBTQ culture: the right to love and live beyond the binary.