Monitoring economic conditions in Indonesia, particularly in terms of the Covid-19 impact, Bank Indonesia regularly publishes rupiah stability indicators, including the exchange rate and inflation, as follows:
A. Exchange Rate Developments 22-26th February 2021
End of Thursday, 25th February 2021
- The rupiah closed at a (bid) level of Rp14,080 per US dollar.
- Benchmark 10-year SBN yield decreased to a level of 6.52%.
- DXY[1] weakened to a level of 90.13.
- 10-year US Treasury (UST) Note[2] yield increased to a level of 1.520%.
Friday Morning, 19th February 2021
- The rupiah opened at a (bid) level of Rp14,090 per US dollar.
- Benchmark 10-year SBN yield increased to 6.71%.
Foreign Capital Flows (Fourth Week of February 2021)
- Indonesia 5-year credit default swap (CDS) premium increased to 70.55bps on 25th February 2021 compared with 66.48bps on 19th February 2021.
- Based on transaction data from 22-25th February 2021, non-resident investors booked a net sell totalling Rp18.27 trillion in the domestic financial markets, with a net sell in the SBN market of Rp19.50 trillion and a net buy recorded in the stock market of Rp1.23 trillion.
- Based on settlement data in 2021 (ytd), non-resident investors have booked a net buy totalling Rp14.68 trillion in the domestic financial markets.
B. Inflation Remains Low and Under Control
- Based on the latest Price Monitoring Survey in the fourth week of February 2021, monthly inflation in February 2021 is predicted at 0.08% (mtm). Therefore, inflation in February 2021 for the calendar year is estimated at 0.34% (ytd) and 1.35% (yoy) annually.
- The main inflation contributors in the reporting period were bird's eye chilies, red chilies and water spinach (0.02% mtm), as well as shallots, spinach, beef, reinforcing bar and filtered clove cigarettes (0.01% mtm). In contrast, gold jewellery (-0.03% mtm), purebred chicken eggs and purebred chicken meat (-0.02% mtm), as well as tomatoes, bottled water and intercity transportation (-0.01% mtm) experienced deflationary pressures.
Bank Indonesia will continue to strengthen coordination with the Government and other relevant authorities in order to carefully monitor Covid-19 transmission dynamics and the economic impact over time, while taking the coordinated policy measures required to maintain macroeconomic and financial system stability as well as support solid and resilient national economic growth.
Head of Communication Department
Erwin Haryono
Executive Director
Information about Bank Indonesia
Tel. 021-131, Email: bicara@bi.go.id
[1] DXY or the US Dollar Index is an index of the value of the United States dollar relative to a basket of six foreign currencies, namely EUR, JPY, GBP, CAD, SEK and CHF.
[2] United States Treasury Notes are government debt instruments issued by the United States Department of the Treasury with tenors of 1-10 years.