|

Indonesian Rupiah: Macro headwinds versus reversal risks against US Dollar – MUFG

MUFG’s Lloyd Chan highlights that macro headwinds continue to pressure the Indonesian Rupiah, with higher US yields, elevated Oil prices and narrowing rate differentials weighing on IDR against the Dollar. He notes rising macro pressures from a weaker current account, fiscal subsidy risks and softer growth, but also stresses that stretched positioning and cheap valuations leave USD/IDR vulnerable to a catalyst-driven reversal.

Macro pressure but reversal risk building

"Macro headwinds remain dominant. Higher US yields (2-year yield above 4%), elevated oil prices, and narrowing interest rate differentials (at historically low levels) continue to pressure IDR against the dollar."

"Macro pressures are increasing. Deteriorating current account (-1.1% of GDP in Q1), rising fiscal risks from energy subsidies, and softer underlying growth momentum are adding to rupiah vulnerability. Q1 growth has been driven by a strong increase in government consumption (+1.3pp to growth vs. +0.4pp in Q4 2025)."

"Inflation risks are skewed to the upside, driven by higher oil prices, a weaker rupiah, and a closing output gap, even as subsidies partially delay pass-through. We forecast headline inflation to average 3% in 2026 (1.9% in 2025) and GDP growth of 5.3% (5.1% in 2025)."

"BI tightening (50bps hike in May) and higher SRBI yields (12-month at 6.8%) provide some support for the rupiah. But concerns over government intervention in commodity exports are further weighing on investor confidence. Additional two 25bps BI rate hikes could be on the cards this year to defend the rupiah."

"With positioning stretched and valuations cheap, the risk-reward may be shifting, making USD/IDR increasingly vulnerable to a catalyst-driven reversal. The pair is now trading deep in overbought territory, while IDR appears to be quite cheap (near 2013 taper tantrum levels) on a real effective exchange rate basis. A potential US–Iran de-escalation could be a key trigger for reversal."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

Ripple nears lifeline support as macro risks intensify

Ripple continues to face significant selling pressure, sliding below $1.10 at the time of writing on Wednesday. This decline mirrors the broader weakness in the crypto market, exacerbated by mounting macroeconomic headwinds and persistent geopolitical uncertainties.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP trade under pressure as September Fed rate-hike odds increase

Bitcoin is trading between $62,000 and $63,000 at the time of writing on Wednesday, weighed down by headwinds stemming from macroeconomic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, especially as the US and Iran continue to offer conflicting accounts of the nuclear discussions.

Cardano vulnerable to deeper losses amid SecondFi exploit

Cardano price hovers below $0.1500 at press time on Wednesday, extending a refreshed bearish impulse move of over 20% in the last nine days. The exploitation of the Cardano ecosystem’s SecondFi wallet-generation software, resulting in a loss of about 16 million ADA, weighs on retail strength.

Bitcoin struggles as institutional demand remains weak

Bitcoin remains under pressure, trading around $62,700 on Wednesday after losing 2% the previous day. Persistent institutional selling, with spot Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) recording outflows on Tuesday, continues to weigh on BTC.

Bitcoin: Recovery hopes fade after the Fed spoils the party
Bitcoin (BTC) is set to end the week in the red, trading near the 200-Week Simple Moving Average (SMA) at around $62,300 on Friday. Institutional selling persists, capping BTC’s recovery as spot Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) point to a sixth consecutive week of outflows.