http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/04/03/weak-reserves-put-rupiah-under-pressure.html

Weak reserves put rupiah under pressure
Satria Sambijantoro, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Headlines | Wed, April 03 
2013, 10:49 AM 
A- A A+ 
Paper Edition | Page: 1

The rupiah will face intense pressure if the government cannot resolve 
escalating energy subsidy costs and a widening oil trade deficit, economists 
have warned. 

In a report titled “Indonesia in Focus: Testing Thresholds” that was released 
on Tuesday, economists from Bank of America Merrill Lynch said that the rupiah 
might trade above 10,000 per US dollar in the short run if the government fails 
to resolve the problems.
(Source: Bloomberg)
The report said that BI would have problems in defending the rupiah and might 
breach the psychological barrier of US$100 billion in foreign exchange (forex) 
reserves. In February, BI’s forex reserves hit a two-year low of $105.2 
billion, equivalent of 5.7 months of imports and short-term foreign debts. 

With stronger pressure on the rupiah expected, the psychological threshold 
would “likely be tested soon”, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch 
economist Hak Bin Chua. “If BI continues to intervene heavily, the $100 billion 
reserves threshold will likely be breached in April or May,” he said. BI’s 
forex reserves were down $7.6 billion in the first two months of the year as 
the central bank stepped up intervention to defend the rupiah, the 
worst-performing currency in the region in 2012. The currency traded at 9,739 
per US dollar on Tuesday, compared with 9,740 a day earlier, according to 
Bloomberg.

This week, the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) reported that Indonesia posted a 
$1.1 billion deficit in its oil and gas trade in February, taking the 
full-month trade deficit to $327 million. 

The deficit was attributed mainly to fuel subsidies, a politically sensitive 
issue in Indonesia, whose citizens have previously launched violent protests 
against actual or proposed fuel price hikes. 

The government, which has refrained from raising fuel prices to maintain 
political stability ahead of elections in 2014, has announced plans to limit 
subsidized fuel consumption. 

Among the options said to be under consideration by President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono are forbidding private vehicles from using subsidized fuel, as well 
as developing technology to limit consumption. 

Meanwhile, Citibank Indonesia economist Helmi Arman said that there might be 
“another round of turbulence” for the rupiah given that the oil-trade balance 
might continue to deteriorate, as a recovery for the nation’s commodity exports 
was nowhere in sight. 

“We revised down our 6 to 12 month rupiah forecast of 9,900 per US dollar last 
month to account for this; but upside risk remains if the terms of trade 
continue to deteriorate,” he wrote in a research note released this week.

Bank Danamon economists Dian Ayu Yustina, Anton Hendranata and Anton H. Gunawan 
agreed that the trade balance figure remained a concern as it slipped deeper 
into negative territory. 

The economists said that they were concerned that potential pressure on the oil 
and gas trade balance could put additional pressure on the nation’s current 
accounts, which would in turn lead to negative sentiment for the rupiah. 

They estimated that in the short-term, the rupiah would hover between Rp 9,600 
and Rp 9,700 per US dollar, but remained upbeat that the rupiah would 
strengthen to Rp 9,502 by the end of the year.


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