Indonesia’s 10-year bond yield increased to 6.85%, hovering near a three-week high after U.S. Treasury yields hit a 16-month peak. Inflationary pressures linked to the Middle East conflict reinforced views that the Fed could raise interest rates later this year, prompting investors to reduce exposure to emerging-market assets. Locally, pressure on local bonds mounted as the rupiah repeatedly slid to fresh record lows against the U.S. dollar since April, fuelling concerns over capital outflows and imported inflation. Investors also stayed cautious ahead of Bank Indonesia’s policy meeting this week, after President Prabowo dismissed concerns that the rupiah’s weakness reflected a deteriorating economy. Softer domestic fundamentals added to the strain, as retail sales rose the least in nine months during March, and the April consumer mood was near a five-month low. Still, losses were capped by recent government measures to roll out a bond stabilisation fund aimed at stabilising markets.

The yield on Indonesia 10Y Bond Yield rose to 6.85% on May 18, 2026, marking a 0.14 percentage points increase from the previous session. Over the past month, the yield has edged up by 0.27 points, according to over-the-counter interbank yield quotes for this government bond maturity. Historically, the Indonesia 10-Year Government Bond Yield reached an all time high of 21.11 in October of 2008. Indonesia 10-Year Government Bond Yield - data, forecasts, historical chart - was last updated on May 18 of 2026.

The yield on Indonesia 10Y Bond Yield rose to 6.85% on May 18, 2026, marking a 0.14 percentage points increase from the previous session. Over the past month, the yield has edged up by 0.27 points, according to over-the-counter interbank yield quotes for this government bond maturity. The Indonesia 10-Year Government Bond Yield is expected to trade at 6.68 percent by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 6.46 in 12 months time.



Bonds Yield Day Month Year Date
Indonesia 10Y 6.85 0.142% 0.268% -0.005% May/18
Indonesia 1M 5.68 0.015% 0.683% -0.431% May/13
Indonesia 52W 6.27 -0.113% 0.464% -0.005% May/13
Indonesia 20Y 6.75 0% 0.044% -0.265% May/13
Indonesia 30Y 6.87 0% 0.020% -0.144% May/13
Indonesia 3M 5.83 0.053% 0.628% -0.302% May/13
Indonesia 3Y 6.53 -0.001% 0.362% -0.169% May/13
Indonesia 5Y 6.80 0.189% 0.456% 0.202% May/18
Indonesia 6M 6.00 0.024% 0.605% -0.165% May/13



Related Last Previous Unit Reference
Indonesia Inflation Rate 2.42 3.48 percent Apr 2026
Indonesia Interest Rate 4.75 4.75 percent Apr 2026
Indonesia Unemployment Rate 4.68 4.85 percent Mar 2026

Indonesia 10-Year Government Bond Yield
Generally, a government bond is issued by a national government and is denominated in the country`s own currency. Bonds issued by national governments in foreign currencies are normally referred to as sovereign bonds. The yield required by investors to loan funds to governments reflects inflation expectations and the likelihood that the debt will be repaid.
Actual Previous Highest Lowest Dates Unit Frequency
6.85 6.71 21.11 4.99 2003 - 2026 percent Daily

News Stream
Indonesia 10-Year Yield Rises to Near 3-Week High
Indonesia’s 10-year bond yield increased to 6.85%, hovering near a three-week high after U.S. Treasury yields hit a 16-month peak. Inflationary pressures linked to the Middle East conflict reinforced views that the Fed could raise interest rates later this year, prompting investors to reduce exposure to emerging-market assets. Locally, pressure on local bonds mounted as the rupiah repeatedly slid to fresh record lows against the U.S. dollar since April, fuelling concerns over capital outflows and imported inflation. Investors also stayed cautious ahead of Bank Indonesia’s policy meeting this week, after President Prabowo dismissed concerns that the rupiah’s weakness reflected a deteriorating economy. Softer domestic fundamentals added to the strain, as retail sales rose the least in nine months during March, and the April consumer mood was near a five-month low. Still, losses were capped by recent government measures to roll out a bond stabilisation fund aimed at stabilising markets.
2026-05-18
Indonesia 10-Year Yield Rises on Global, Domestic Strains
Indonesia’s 10-year bond yield increased to 6.74%, rebounding from recent subdued levels and mirroring gains in U.S. Treasuries ahead of April CPI data, which may shed light on how the Iran conflict is rippling through the global economy. Higher U.S. yields curbed appetite for emerging-market assets, while the rupiah slid to a fresh record low against the dollar, adding strain to local bonds. Domestic fundamentals compounded the pressure, with retail sales growth slowing to a nine-month low and consumer confidence near a five-month trough. Concerns also lingered that the war in Iran could lift energy costs and disrupt supply chains, even as April inflation eased. Still, losses were partly capped by reports that the government plans to launch a bond stabilization fund to shore up the debt market amid rising yields and persistent capital outflows.
2026-05-12
Indonesia 10-Year Yield Edges Lower on Strong Growth, Low Inflation
Indonesia’s 10-year bond yield eased to 6.81% after recently touching a one-year high of around 6.9%, as stronger domestic fundamentals helped stabilize sentiment. Fresh data showed the economy grew 5.61% yoy in Q1 2026, the fastest pace since late 2022, driven by resilient private consumption, firmer government spending, and solid fixed investment. The annual inflation also cooled to 2.42% in April, hitting an eight-month low and comfortably within Bank Indonesia’s 1-1/1%–3-1/2% target, easing policy pressure. Yet the retreat in yields remains measured. Fiscal buffers are narrowing despite efforts to contain costs from President Prabowo’s flagship programs, while cost-push risks could re-emerge, driven by higher fuel prices and a weaker rupiah. Globally, elevated yields cap downside: the U.S. 10-year Treasury hovered near 4.44% as inflation concerns, fueled by rising energy prices amid Middle East tensions, kept borrowing costs high.
2026-05-05