• Markets Feel Impact of Bank Indonesia’s Interest Rate Cut

    One day after the surprise interest rate cut by Indonesia’s central bank, Indonesian stocks surge to a new record level led by interest rate sensitive stocks (such as financial institutions, construction firms and property firms) while the rupiah and government bonds are weakening. Yesterday (17/02), Bank Indonesia shocked markets by lowering its key interest rate (BI rate) and deposit facility rate (Fasbi) by 25 basis points, each, to 7.50 percent and 5.50 percent, respectively. Easing monetary policy is back in fashion among the region’s central banks.

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  • Kenapa Indeks Saham Indonesia & Rupiah Datar pada Hari Selasa?

    Sejalan dengan sebagian besar pasar saham dan mata uang di Asia Tenggara, kinerja Indeks Harga Saham Gabungan (IHSG) Indonesia serta rupiah agak datar dengan kecenderungan melemah sedikit pada hari Selasa (17/02). Kebanyakan investor tampaknya menahan diri sebelum perayaan Imlek pada hari Kamis 19 Februari. Selain itu, pelaku pasar di Indonesia sedang menunggu keputusan suku bunga (BI rate) dari Bank Indonesia hari ini. Sementara itu, gagal pembicaraan antara Yunani dan kreditornya pada Senin merusak sentimen di Asia.

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  • HM Sampoerna to Increase Free Float on Indonesia Stock Exchange

    HM Sampoerna, Indonesia's largest tobacco producer by market capitalization (controlling about 23 percent of the Indonesian tobacco market), plans to increase its free-float shares by 5.68 percent (valued at USD $1.27 billion) in order to meet the minimum free float requirement of 7.5 percent set by the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) in a regulation introduced in January 2014 and which will come into effect on 30 January 2016. By this date all listed companies on the IDX must have a minimum free float of 7.5 percent.

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  • Trade Balance Indonesia: Import and Export Fall in January 2015

    Indonesia posted a USD $709.4 million trade surplus in January 2015 according to the latest data from Statistics Indonesia (BPS) released on Monday (16/02). Although the surplus is higher than expected and thus has a positive impact on the country’s trade and current account balances, the data also indicated that exports fell 8.09 percent year-on-year (y/y) to USD $13.30 billion signalling continued weakening global demand for Indonesian exports. Meanwhile, Indonesian imports shrank by 15.6 percent (y/y) to USD $12.59 billion.

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