18 June 2026 (closed)
Jakarta Composite Index (6,172.34) -48.40 -0.78%
Tag: Rupiah
Below is a list with tagged columns and company profiles.
Latest Reports Rupiah
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Rupiah Update: Modest Appreciation against US Dollar, but Volatile Performance
The Indonesian rupiah rate appreciated modestly in September 2019. The currency started the month at the level of IDR 14,237 per US dollar and ended the month at IDR 14,174 per US dollar (data taken from Bank Indonesia’s benchmark Jisdor rate). In other words, the rupiah strengthened 0.44 percent against greenback in the month of September 2019.
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Indonesian Stocks & Rupiah Remain in Red Territory
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Indonesian Currency Update: Stable Rupiah Performance in February 2019
The Indonesian rupiah made a stable performance against the US dollar in February 2019. The benchmark JISDOR rate of Bank Indonesia ended the second month of the year at the position of IDR 14,062 per US dollar, appreciating modestly from the level of IDR 14,072 per US dollar at the last trading day of January 2019.
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Indonesian Rupiah Ends 2018 on a Stable Note but Shows Mixed Performance Overall
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Indonesia Investments' Research Report Released: December 2018 Edition
On Monday (07/01) Indonesia Investments released the December 2018 edition of its monthly research report. The report aims to inform the reader of the key political, economic and social developments that occurred in Indonesia in the month of December 2018 and also touches upon key international developments that impacted on the Indonesian economy.
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Bank Indonesia Raises Key Interest Rate to 6.00% in November 2018
Although we predicted in our latest research report that Indonesia's central bank (Bank Indonesia) would raise its benchmark interest rate at the two-day monetary policy meeting on 14-15 November 2018, we were still taken by surprise after the decision was announced. After all, the rupiah had appreciated significantly in the days after the launch of our October research report.
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Current Account Balance Expected to Pass Beyond 3% of GDP in Q3-2018
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Monetary Policy Indonesia: Central Bank Leaves Rates Unchanged in October 2018
The central bank of Indonesia (Bank Indonesia) left its benchmark interest rate (the BI 7-Day Reverse Repo Rate) unchanged at 5.75 percent at the October 2018 policy meeting (22-23 October). Meanwhile, the deposit facility and lending facility rates were kept at 5.00 percent and 6.50 percent, respectively.
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Indonesia Investments' Research Report Released: September 2018 Edition
On Monday (08/10) Indonesia Investments released the September 2018 edition of its monthly research report. The report aims to inform the reader of the key political, economic and social developments that occurred in Indonesia in the month of September 2018 and also touches upon key international developments that impacted on the Indonesian economy.
Latest Columns Rupiah
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IMF Says ‘the Worst Is Yet to Come’ for the Global Economy; How Will This Affect Indonesia?
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New Report of Indonesia Investments Released - 'Return to Uncertainty'
In the second half of September 2022 the Indonesian rupiah experienced some steep depreciating pressures, nearly touching IDR 15,300 per US dollar. It prompted Bank Indonesia to step and intervene in markets to limit the currency’s decline; a step that typically leads to a drop in the country’s foreign exchange reserves.
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Monetary Policy of Indonesia; Bank Indonesia Raises Benchmark Interest Rate to 3.75% in August 2022
Indonesia’s central bank (Bank Indonesia) – finally – decided to raise its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 3.75 percent after concluding its two-day policy meeting on 23 August 2022, thereby joining the global wave of rate hikes as central banks need to combat accelerated inflation, while –especially in emerging markets – higher rates also function to prevent too much capital outflows as US assets become more attractive amid aggressive US Federal Reserve tightening.
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Monetary Policy of Indonesia; Bank Indonesia Keeps Benchmark Interest Rate at 3.50%
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Bank Indonesia Staying Behind the Curve; Leaves Interest Rates Unchanged at Policy Meeting
We were surprised to learn that Indonesia’s central bank (Bank Indonesia) decided to leave its interest rates unchanged at the two-day monetary policy meeting on 23-24 May 2022. The benchmark BI 7-Day Reverse Repo Rate was kept at 3.50 percent, while the deposit facility and lending facility rates were maintained at 2.75 percent and 4.25 percent, respectively. We had expected Bank Indonesia to raise its key rate by 0.25 percent to 3.75 percent at this occasion.
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What About Indonesia’s Monetary Policy & Rupiah Rate in 2022? Do We See Stronger Fundamentals?
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Impact of Looming Federal Reserve Tapering on Indonesia’s Financial Markets
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Monetary Policy and Rupiah Update: Bank Indonesia Leaves Interest Rate Unchanged
The central bank of Indonesia (Bank Indonesia) decided to leave its interest rates unchanged at the two-day monetary policy meeting that ended on 20 April 2021. The benchmark BI Seven-Day Reverse Repo Rate was held at 3.50 percent, while the deposit facility and lending facility rates were kept at 2.75 percent and 4.25 percent, respectively.
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Indonesian Rupiah Rebounds in April 2020 as COVID-19 Pandemic Fears Ease
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Coronavirus Fears Put Heavy Pressures on the Rupiah Exchange Rate
Around the globe, financial markets experienced a heavy storm – or a tornado – in March 2020 as coronavirus fears peaked. Particularly after the World Health Organization (or WHO) officially labelled the COVID-19 outbreak a “pandemic” on 11 March 2020 and a growing number of nations started imposing restrictions on the movement of people and economic activity, markets entered deep red territory.
Other Tags
- Indonesia Stock Exchange (762)
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- GDP (720)
- Bank Indonesia (631)
- Federal Reserve (564)
- Jakarta Composite Index (509)
- China (458)
- IHSG (416)
- Infrastructure (408)
- BI Rate (405)
Latest Reports
- Bank Indonesia Raises Benchmark Rate to 5.75% in Continuous Move to Stabilize Rupiah
- Hormuz Breakthrough Fuels Indonesian Market Rally; Stocks and Rupiah Strengthen
- Against the Tide: Indonesia’s Danantara Defies Outflows with $4.6B Debut Bond Demand
- Bank Indonesia Goes for Unexpected Interest Rate Increase to Support Rupiah
- BI Forex Reserves Hit 2-Year Low as Currency Interventions Intensify