Rupiah Near Record Low as Reserves, Exports Weigh
2026-05-06 05:55
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
The Indonesian rupiah hovered near IDR 17,400 per dollar on Wednesday, close to record lows as concerns over external buffers deepened.
Declining foreign reserves have raised doubts about the central bank’s ability to support the currency, with markets awaiting April data due Thursday after March figures fell to a near two-year low.
Exports also shrank in March, the first time since December, adding pressure to the external balance.
Authorities have moved to respond: the chief economic minister said the government is working with Bank Indonesia to expand swap lines with China, Japan, and South Korea, while the central bank cut the cap on undocumented U.S.
dollar cash purchases to USD 25,000 from USD 50,000 to curb speculation.
April Inflation stayed contained at 2.42%, within the central bank’s limit, though risks persist from rising energy costs and supply disruptions linked to Middle East tensions.
Meantime, the U.S.
dollar index eased on hopes of a potential Washington–Tehran deal.