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Indonesia Breaks Record for Exports Value with US$21.42bn in August: BPS

Translator: Ririe Ranggasari
Editor: Laila Afifa
15 September 2021 16:34 WIB


TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Indonesia's central statistics agency, Statistics Indonesia (BPS), recorded US$21.42 billion export value in August 2021. According to BPS chief Margo Yuwono, this was a new record for Indonesia's exports.

"The previous highest was in August 2011, which was US$18.60 billion," Margo said in a press conference, Wednesday, September 15.

August 2021's export value reflects a 20.95 percent increase from the previous month and 64.10 percent higher compared to August 2020.

Margo said that non-oil and gas exports reached US$20.36 billion, up 21.75 percent from July and 63.43 percent year-on-year (yoy).

Overall, since the beginning of 2021, the accumulated value of Indonesia's exports from January to August 2021 reached US$142.01 billion, a 37.77-percent (yoy) increase.

Based on the provinces of origin, Margo added, West Java recorded the biggest export value so far this year with US$21.56 billion or 15.18 percent of the nation's total. The second largest was from East Java with US$14.87 billion (10.47%), followed by East Kalimantan with US$13.33 billion (9.39%).

 
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Rupiah Strengthens to 14,215 per US Dollar Driven by Indonesia's Trade Balance Surplus

Liputan6.com, Jakarta - The rupiah exchange rate against the United States (US) dollar opened higher in trading this Thursday. The strengthening of the rupiah is expected to continue until the close of trading.

The rupiah on Thursday morning moved up 25 points or 0.18 percent to 14,215 per US dollar compared to the position at the previous close of trading at 14,240 per US dollar.

Money market observer Ariston Tjendra explained that the rupiah exchange rate transacted between banks in Jakarta on Thursday strengthened, supported by the August 2021 trade balance surplus .

"The increase in Indonesia's trade balance surplus, which was quite high from the previous month of around 83 percent, provided fresh air for the strengthening of the rupiah today," said Ariston, quoted from Antara, Thursday (16/9/2021).

The Central Statistics Agency (BPS) noted that the trade balance in August 2021 experienced a surplus of USD 4.74 billion with an export value of USD 21.42 billion and imports of USD 16.68 billion.

 
No more Excuse not to pay our KF 21/IFX program financial obligation :sniper:


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Ooredoo, Hutchison ink $6B deal on Indosat-Tri merger

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Loyalty is key: Indosat Ooredoo Greater Jakarta head Edi Riyanto (left), senior vice president (SVP) and head of retail and device management M. Andre Reinaldy (second left) as well as SVP and head of customer experience and service operation Philip Joseph talk with customers at the Indosat Ooredoo office in Jakarta in this undated photo.(JP/Dhoni Setiawan)


Vincent Fabian Thomas (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Sat, September 18, 2021

Two telecom giants, Qatar-based Ooredoo and Hong Kong’s CK Hutchison, have inked a US$6 billion deal to merge their Indonesian businesses PT Indosat Ooredoo and PT Hutchison 3 Indonesia.

The new entity, PT Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison, would be the second-largest telecommunication company in Indonesia with almost $3 billion in annual revenue and could spend $300 million to $400 million in annual capital expenditure over the next three to five years, the companies announced on Thursday.

Vikram Sinha, chief operating officer at Indosat Ooredoo, was nominated the CEO of PT Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison, while Nicky Lee, finance head at CK Hutchison Holdings Limited, would serve as CFO of the new entity.

Indosat Ooredoo president director Ahmad Al-Neama and Hutchison 3 Indonesia president director Cliff Woo are to keep their positions until the merger is compl...

 
The biggest telecommunication company in Indonesia is state owned PT TELKOM. PT Telkomsel, their subsidiary company could be the second biggest before the merger of Indosat and Three.


Telkomsel named The Best Company to Work For in Asia 2021

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Inforial (The Jakarta Post) Jakarta ● Mon, September 13, 2021

Leading digital telecommunications company Telkomsel, a subsidiary of state-owned communications company PT Telkom Indonesia, has won The Best Company to Work For in Asia 2021 from HR Asia, a global magazine serving as a source of information on human resources practices and trends.

Telkomsel said in a statement in Jakarta recently that the company had won a similar award in 2017. Telkomsel managed to outrank 250 companies from Indonesia and a number of participants from other countries. Telkomsel’s Human Capital Experience Management Vice President Andry Ferdiansyah accepted the award in an online award presentation ceremony, organized by Singapore’s Business Media International (BMI), one of the leading business media companies in Asia, on Sept. 8.

In assessing the nominees, the judges put much emphasis on Telkom’s strategic initiatives, especially developing employee engagement during the pandemic to enhance their productivity. Apart from that, they noted Telkomsel’s employer branding strategy to attract the best digital talent to the company.

Telkomsel expressed hope that the award could add to its motivation to maintain its reputation as the best company to work for based on moral values. That way, employees could make the best possible contributions to the company and the Indonesian people, it said.

The event gave the largest and most prestigious award in employee engagement and company excellence, with more than 300 company participants involving 2 million respondents across industries and regions. Telkomsel was one of the 46 winners from Indonesia in different categories, including banking, insurance, finance, retail, service, manufacturing and natural resource management. Nominees came from 11 locales, namely Indonesia, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.

 
Govt considers curbs on processed nickel exports

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Work is carried out in this undated picture at the Pomalaa nickel smelter in Kolaka, Southeast Sulawesi, operated by state-owned metal mining firm PT Aneka Tambang (Antam).(Handout/Antam)

Divya Karyza (The Jakarta Post) PREMIUM Jakarta ● Wed, September 22, 2021


The Investment Ministry is mulling over plans to ban or restrict the export of processed nickel products with less than 70 percent nickel content. Speaking at a virtual conference on Sept. 17, Investment Minister Bahlil Lahadalia said the government was planning to ban exports of processed products containing 30 to 40 percent nickel to preserve Indonesia’s nickel reserves and develop the downstream mining industry.

Indonesian Nickel Mining Association (APNI) secretary-general Meidy Katrin Lengkey said the regulation would encourage investors to build a domestic industry for finished products. However, she added that the government needed to ensure that regulations were in place to accommodate downstream industry development, adequate infrastructure and demand.

 
Prudent measure by Sri Mulyani

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Govt debt issuance well below budget plan

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Vincent Fabian Thomas (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Fri, September 24, 2021

The Finance Ministry has said that government debt issuance declined 20.5 percent year-on-year (yoy) as of August, with the trend expected to continue until the year-end as the government strives to reduce the budget deficit. Debt issue this year reached Rp 550.6 trillion (US$38.68 billion) through the end of August, down from Rp 692.3 trillion over the same period in 2020.

This amounts to just 46.8 percent of the Rp 1.177 quadrillion debt issue planned for the full year. “Even though it is already the eighth month of this year, debt issuance remains below 50 percent of the targeted amount. Why? This was due to an adjustment to the debt issuance target,” Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told a virtual press conference on Thursday.

 
Sun Cable to invest $2.5b in Indonesia for subsea power line

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Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Binsar Panjaitan and Australia Ambassador to Indonesia Penny Williams take part in a press conference on the Australia-Asia PowerLink project on Sep. 23, 2021.(Office of the Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment/-)



Dzulfiqar Fathur Rahman (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Fri, September 24, 2021

Energy company Sun Cable is planning to invest US$2.5 billion in Indonesia as part of its plan to develop a passing 5,000 kilometer subsea power line that links Singapore to Australia. The project, called the Australia-Asia PowerLink (AAPowerLink), will connect customers in Singapore to a 17 to 20 gigawatt solar farm – the biggest in the world – in Australia. The farm will also have an energy storage system with a capacity of 36 to 42 gigawatt hours.

The AAPowerLink project will not supply electricity to consumers in Indonesia. The investment will mostly go to procuring equipment and services, as well as to operational and maintenance costs.

 
Even though we don't have lithium mines of our own yet, it's good that we are already working on building a lithium processing plant here..
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China's Chengxin and Tsingshan team up for US$350 million Indonesia lithium project

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The Indonesia Morowali Industrial Park (IMIP) in Central Sulawesi. - Jakarta Post/ANN

JAKARTA, Sept 25 (Reuters): China's Shenzhen Chengxin Lithium Group Co Ltd and an affiliate of steel and nickel giant Tsingshan Holding Group will invest in a US$350 million Indonesian lithium project to capture demand from the electric vehicle (EV) battery sector.
Tsingshan, which shook up the global nickel market by rapidly increasing production at low cost in Indonesia, is moving into lithium at a time when prices for the commodity are soaring amid booming EV sales in top market China.

In a filing, Chengxin said the partners would build a plant to make lithium chemicals in Indonesia Morowali Industrial Park on the island of Sulawesi. The park is home to several Chinese-invested projects including those making nickel and cobalt, which are also used in EV batteries.
Chengxin said the plant would produce 50,000 tonnes a year of lithium hydroxide and 10,000 tonnes a year of lithium carbonate, without providing a startup date.

Hydroxide prices in China are up 162.7% year-to-date, while those for carbonate are up 192.6%, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.
Chengxin said it would own 65% of the joint venture - called PT ChengTok Lithium Indonesia - and Singapore-incorporated Stellar Investment Pte would hold 35%.
A Chengxin investor relations officer on Friday said Stellar is an affiliate of Tsingshan.
Tsingshan did not respond to a request for comment.
Indonesia is the world's biggest nickel miner but banned exports of nickel ore from 2020 as it sought to process more resources at home and establish a complete EV battery supply chain.
Last week, South Korea's LG Energy Solution and Hyundai Motor Group started construction of a $1.1 billion plant to make EV batteries in Indonesia's West Java province.
Chengxin did not say from where the lithium plant would source its raw materials but Daiwa Capital Markets analyst Dennis Ip said in a note that nearby Australia, which mines lithium-rich mineral spodumene, was the most likely option.
"It will be interesting to see which Australian miners have spare spodumene resources to be sold to Chengxin," Ip added. - Reuters


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Ganfeng Lithium may make EV battery nickel chemicals in Indonesia -exec
CONTRIBUTOR
Tom Daly Reuters
PUBLISHED
SEP 27, 2021 2:32AM EDT

China's Ganfeng Lithium Co Ltd, the world's biggest lithium company by market capitalisation, is considering making nickel chemicals for electric vehicle (EV) batteries in Indonesia, its vice chairman told Reuters.

Sept 27 (Reuters) - China's Ganfeng Lithium Co Ltd 002460.SZ, 1772.HK, the world's biggest lithium company by market capitalisation, is considering making nickel chemicals for electric vehicle (EV) batteries in Indonesia, its vice chairman told Reuters.
Ganfeng earlier this year agreed to buy nickel ore from Indonesia-focused miner Silkroad Nickel Ltd SILK.SI and is set to invest up to $30 million in the Singapore-listed company.
"We are about to close the deal and after that we are studying making downstream chemicals," Wang Xiaoshen said in an interview for the upcoming Reuters IMPACT conference.
The move would see Ganfeng, which supplies lithium to automakers including U.S. EV leader Tesla Inc TSLA.O, add production of another battery metal to its portfolio and become the latest Chinese company to pursue nickel smelting in Indonesia.

"Of course, we are closely watching the Indonesian national policy for nickel exports," Wang said. "So we will decide when the policy is clear what product is suitable to be produced in Indonesia. Definitely that would be supplies for the battery supply chain."
Indonesia, the world's biggest nickel miner, banned exports of nickel ore from 2020 to process more resources at home and set up a complete EV battery supply chain.
In addition, Indonesia is exploring levying an export tax on nickel products with less than 70% nickel content.
"We are evaluating all the options, including building the process ourselves" or third-party processing, Wang said.

Ganfeng occasionally buys nickel for production of nickel-cobalt-manganese (NCM) battery precursors to supplement its main source of supply - battery recycling, Wang explained.
To make the precursor business scalable, some nickel and cobalt will have to come from a more stable source, he said.
News that Ganfeng is thinking of producing nickel chemicals comes as one of the biggest investors in that space, Tsingshan Holding Group, is venturing into lithium in Indonesia.
Wang said it was "natural" for newcomers to join the industry given high lithium prices AM-995C-LCTC, which are up almost 200% this year on resurgent demand.

Ganfeng has also faced competition from an unnamed battery maker over its latest acquisition target, Argentina-focused Millennial Lithium Corp ML.V. It has until Monday to match or better the battery maker's offer for Millennial, which was higher than its own.
"We still have not made the final decision but we believe our original offer is a reasonable price," Wang said on Friday. "Even if the market is very hot we still need to keep our mind cool."
Register for Reuters IMPACT here: https://reutersevents.com/events/impact/
(Reporting by Tom Daly; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

 
World Bank expects Indonesian economy to grow 3.7% in 2021
3 hours ago

World Bank expects Indonesian economy to grow 3.7% in 2021

World Bank's logo. (ANTARA/HO-World Bank docs/am/KT)

Jakarta (ANTARA) - The World Bank has lowered its forecast for Indonesia's economic growth for this year to 3.7 percent from April's prediction of 4.4 percent citing the recent increase in COVID-19 Delta variant cases.

"The government's capacity to implement intelligent strategies is important. The 3T method can tackle the Delta variant that is very contagious," World Bank's chief economist for East Asia and the Pacific region, Aaditya Mattoo, said during a briefing here on Tuesday.

According to Mattoo, the vaccination program is key to restoring the economy not only in Indonesia but also in other countries in East Asia and the Pacific region.

In the next few months, vaccination coverage will reach 60 percent of the population in many countries, such as Indonesia and the Philippines, which are predicted to reach their target by the first half of 2022, he added.

"Hopefully, Indonesia and the Philippines can reach the target by the middle of next year," he remarked.

Related news: ADB slashes Indonesia's 2021 economic growth forecast to 3.5 percent

Furthermore, Mattoo explained that achieving the vaccination target would signal that community mobility is ready to restart so that the economy can be normalized and recovered.

However, he warned that vaccination alone will not be enough because there are countries that have a high number of vaccinated people, but their economy is still heavily impacted.

Therefore, he suggested that testing, tracing, and isolation (3T) continue to be carried out by the government and asked the public to keep complying with the health protocols.

The World Bank has also predicted a growth of 5.2 percent for the Indonesian economy in 2022, he informed. Meanwhile, by 2023, it can reach 5.1 percent, he added.

"That growth can increase by about 4.5-5 percent in the next few years, supported by macroeconomic policies," he explained.

In addition to vaccination, Mattoo said, economic growth can also be achieved through other endeavors, which are supportive macroeconomic policies, reforms, and new laws.

"The new law is also the reason why we are optimistic," he remarked.

 

Indonesian coal mining companies have to use this window of opportunity to diversify their business, not relying too much on their coal business any more.
 
House passes 2022 state budget with 4.85% deficit

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Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati speaks at the House of Representatives on Sept. 13 2021.(Finance Ministry/Public relation team)


The House of Representatives passed on Thursday the 2022 state budget bill into law, marking the beginning of Indonesia's fiscal consolidation, after nearly two years of heavy spending on COVID-19 relief efforts.

The newly passed bill set Indonesia’s deficit at Rp 868 trillion (US$60.61 billion) next year, equivalent to 4.85 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), the same numbers mentioned by President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo during his draft state budget speech on Aug. 16.

The deficit was lower than the 6.14 percent run up last year and the 5.8 percent target for this year. Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said the approved bill could help Indonesia reinstate the below 3 percent budget deficit cap starting 2023, which was mandated by Law No. 2/2020 on the government's COVID-19 response. The law only allowed the government to exceed

 
Factory activity rebounds thanks to eased pandemic curbs

Dzulfiqar Fathur Rahman (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM Jakarta ● Fri, October 1, 2021

Factory activity in Indonesia rebounded in September as the government eased movement restrictions imposed in the summer to contain the spread of COVID-19, but manufacturers face supply constraints.

The manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) stood at 52.2 in September, marking a rebound from 43.7 in August, London-based business information company IHS Markit reported on Friday.

September’s reading, which is above the 50-point threshold separating contraction and expansion, indicates that manufacturing activity was expanding again following contraction in July and August when the government imposed the emergency mobility curbs.

 
Record-high foreign reserves to strengthen Indonesia’s resilience amid looming taper

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Money matters: A Bank Mandiri employee counts US dollar bills at the state bank’s cash center in Jakarta. Indonesia’s foreign reserves increased in the last four months. (JP/Dhoni Setiawan)

Dzulfiqar Fathur Rahman (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Sun, October 3, 2021


The record-high foreign reserves seen in August suggest that Indonesia has strong fundamentals to face shocks in the financial market due to external factors such as the looming taper by the United States (US) Federal Reserve.

The foreign reserves stood at US$144.8 billion in August, up by $7.5 billion from July, Bank Indonesia (BI) data show. This is enough to cover 9.1 months of imports or 8.7 months of imports and official debt servicing. For imports alone, it has exceeded the international rule of thumb to cover at least three months of imports.

“This will clearly strengthen the fundamentals of Indonesia’s economy amid the pandemic and the normalization of monetary policy among central banks globally,” Josua Pardede, chief economist at publicly listed Bank Permata, told The Jakarta Post in a phone interview on Sept. 27. “It...

 
Coal-fueled power plants no longer an option: Energy Minister

6 hours ago
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Coal-fueled power plants (PLTU) in Suralaya, Banten province. (ANTARA/HO-PT PLN (Persero)/aa) (Handout PT PLN (Persero))


The development of new PLTUs is no longer an option, except those which are now under construction. This will offer a greater chance and room to develop new and renewable energy

Jakarta (ANTARA) - The development of coal-fueled power plants (PLTU) is no longer an option in Indonesia, which is moving to transition from fossil fuels to new and renewable energy, the Energy and Mineral Resources Minister has said.

New and renewable energy is cleaner, environmentally friendly, and has low emissions, Arifin Tasrif said at a webinar accessed from Jakarta on Tuesday.

“The development of new PLTUs is no longer an option, except those which are now under construction. This will offer a greater chance and room to develop new and renewable energy,” he added.

Based on state electricity company PT PLN’s power supply business plan (RUPTL 2021-2030), which was endorsed on September 28, 2021, the capacity of fossil energy-fueled power plants is targeted to increase by just 19.6 gigawatts, or 48.4 percent, in 10 years’ time, Tasrif said.

Related news: Govt should optimally utilize alternative energy sources: Minister

Meanwhile, the capacity of new and renewable energy-based power plants is projected to rise by 20.9 gigawatts, or 51.6 percent, he added.

To achieve the addition of 40.6 gigawatts quickly in the next decade, the government will offer opportunities to Independent Power Producers (IPPs) to build new and renewable energy-based power plants, the minister informed.

The national energy policy is aligned with the Indonesian government’s commitment to the Paris Agreement -- to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in 2030, in accordance with the National Determined Contribution (NDC), by 29 percent on its own and 41 percent with international support, he said.

“Today, the commitment to overcoming climate change has been responded to by adopting a roadmap for net-zero emissions,” Tasrif said.

One of the challenges to net-zero emissions is providing electrical power from low carbon energy sources, he added.

Related news: President highlights Indonesia's energy, climate commitments at MEF

Related news: Indonesia, US intensify cooperation in energy sector: Ministry


Reporter: Sugiharto P, Suharto
Editor: Yuni Arisandy Sinaga
COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2021

 
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