Rupiah Retreats Ahead of Q1 Current Account Data
2026-05-21 06:48
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
The Indonesian rupiah slipped to around IDR 17,670 per dollar on Thursday after briefly hitting below 17,600 in the prior session, as caution set in ahead of Q1 current account data due Friday.
Focus remains on Indonesia’s external balance after the current account swung into deficit in Q4, largely due to a widening oil trade gap.
Support from Bank Indonesia’s larger-than-expected rate hike faded, with Governor Warjiyo warning that higher global energy costs still threaten the currency despite mild inflation.
He also noted that forex reserves have fallen by about USD 10 billion this year through April due to continued intervention.
The rupiah is heading for an eighth straight weekly fall, down 5.6% ytd, but policymakers expect seasonal stabilisation by mid-year.
Dollar demand currently remains elevated amid dividend repatriation, debt payments, and hajj-related flows.
Globally, the U.S.
dollar index eased from a six-week peak on hopes for a U.S.-Iran peace deal, tempering haven demand.