Rupiah Slips Further on Deepest Current Account Deficit in 6 Years
2026-05-22 05:37
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
The Indonesian rupiah extended its losses on Friday, slipping past IDR 17,700 per U.S.
dollar as the dollar index held near a six-week high amid elevated oil prices, sticky U.S.
inflation, and rising Treasury yields.
Domestic data further pressured sentiment, with the current account deficit widening to its deepest level in more than six years, underscoring concerns over Indonesia’s external balance.
Pressure on the local currency has intensified since April, due to capital outflows, fiscal strains, and inflation risks tied to Middle East tensions.
Bank Indonesia’s larger-than-expected rate hike earlier this week provided little relief, after policymakers warned that higher energy costs still threaten the rupiah.
Meanwhile, forex reserves have dropped about USD 10 billion this year through April on continued intervention.
The rupiah is set for an eighth weekly drop, down 1.4% so far and near 6% ytd, though the central bank expects stabilisation by mid-year as seasonal pressures ease.