Rupiah Weakness Persists
2025-11-13 06:16
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
The Indonesian rupiah hovered around 16,720 per dollar on Thursday, marking its third consecutive session of losses as investors grew cautious ahead of Bank Indonesia’s policy meeting next week.
The central bank kept its benchmark rate unchanged at 4.75% in October after cumulative cuts of 150 basis points since September 2024.
However, Governor Perry Warjiyo has signaled further easing ahead, with the benchmark rate expected to be lowered by another 50 basis points by the end of March 2026 to support growth momentum.
Meanwhile, Indonesia’s Q3 current account data, due next week, will draw attention after Q2’s figures showed the ninth consecutive period of deficit and the largest in a year, which was equal to 0.8% of the country's GDP.
For 2025, the central bank projects the deficit to remain within 0.5%–1.3% of GDP.
On the global front, the US dollar index steadied around 99.5 after President Trump approved a short-term funding bill that ended the record-long US government shutdown.