Indonesia Forex Reserves Hit Near 2-Year Low
2026-05-08 03:53
By
Czyrill Jean Coloma
1 min. read
Indonesia’s foreign exchange reserves fell to USD 146.2 billion in April 2026, from USD 148.2 billion in March, marking its lowest level since July 2024.
Bank Indonesia attributed the decline to tax- and service-related outflows, government external debt repayments, and the issuance of global bonds.
The central bank also noted its ongoing intervention in the foreign exchange market to stabilize the rupiah amid heightened global financial market uncertainty.
Despite the decline, reserves remain sufficient to cover 5.8 months of imports, or 5.6 months including import needs and external debt servicing, well above the international adequacy benchmark of around three months.
Looking ahead, Bank Indonesia expects external sector resilience to remain intact, supported by ample reserves and continued foreign capital inflows.
The central bank also cited sustained investor confidence in Indonesia’s economic outlook and relatively attractive investment returns as key supporting factors.