JakartaPost-Apr 23

The Indonesian currency has touched a new nadir as the uneasy ceasefire in the United States-Israel war on Iran presents no reassurance for investors, prompting capital outflows from emerging markets and dragging down currencies across Asia. However, analysts noted that the rupiah is taking a heavier hit than its peers, weighed down by ‘domestic vulnerabilities’ such as mounting fiscal concerns over rising fuel subsidy costs. Readings from Investing.com show the rupiah hitting Rp 17,310 per US dollar during Thursday trading, breaching its lowest-ever valuation of Rp 17,300 recorded during the Asian Financial Crisis in 1998. Destry Damayanti, senior deputy governor of Bank Indonesia (BI), told The Jakarta Post on Thursday that the pressures were “mainly caused by increasing global uncertainty, that’s why currencies in the region experience the same pressure”. She went on to say that BI would keep intervening in both offshore and onshore markets “to maintain exchange rate stability” and attempt to attract capital to domestic assets by “strengthening interest rate structure”. The dollar exchange rate strengthened against most currencies on Thursday whereby Southeast Asia suffered the hardest hit, according to readings from Bloomberg. The rupiah was the worst-performing currency in the region, depreciating 0.61 percent by market close, followed by the Philippine peso and the Thai baht, which weakened by 0.6 percent and 0.55 percent, respectively. The Malaysian ringgit fell 0.23 percent, while the Singapore dollar was comparatively unchanged, slipping just 0.03 percent.

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