Prabowo's Free Meal Plan Stirs Investor Fears About Indonesia's Finances

Translator

Dewi Elvia Muthiariny

Editor

Mahinda Arkyasa

Sabtu, 13 Juli 2024 00:09 WIB

Indonesia's Defence Minister and President-elect Prabowo Subianto arrives to speak at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore June 1, 2024. REUTERS/Edgar Su

TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Indonesia's President-elect Prabowo Subianto wants to give school children free meals, but the plan and his pledge to be 'daring' on spending have the country's debt and currency markets on edge.

Prabowo and his team have tried to distance themselves from any suggestions of fiscal profligacy and to assure market participants the incoming government respects the legal debt limits that cap its budget deficit at 3% of economic output.

But for a market just getting accustomed to stability and recognition for fiscal prudence under current Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, the mere suggestion of heavy spending has been unsettling.

Bond yields have risen and the rupiah has depreciated, though the currency weakness has largely been due to a resilient U.S. dollar.

"Our base case remains that this is more of noise at the moment, but we do see increasing fiscal risk and hence the market may start to require more risk premium on Indonesian government bonds," said Jenny Zeng, chief investment officer for APAC fixed income at Allianz Global Investors.

"Also another risk is because there’s a change of ministers," Zeng said, referring to uncertainties about who will step into the shoes of the highly acclaimed ex-World Bank managing director Sri Mulyani.

A banker at a Chinese lender in Indonesia said the fiscal concerns had prompted it to move around 30% of its portfolio into lower-tenor instruments, including diversifying into rupiah-denominated short-term securities (SRBI) issued by Bank Indonesia.

Prabowo won the election in February but will take office only in October. His free-meal plan, which his team estimates will cost 71 trillion rupiah or US$4.35 billion (with an assumed exchange rate of Rp16,330 to the US dollar) in 2025, should ordinarily not cause any consternation.

Southeast Asia's biggest country has seen its finances improve under the Jokowi administration and runs a small budget deficit. From being rated junk at the start of the century, its bonds are now regarded as investment grade.

Some investors even see merit in Indonesia spending more to achieve its 8% economic growth target. Yet there's unease over how much money Prabowo intends to spend on his programs, and whether he will cut fuel and other subsidies and investments in order to balance the books.

"It appears there will be more uncertainties than certainty. I still stay invested but probably not as overweight as I used to be," said Clifford Lau, a portfolio manager at William Blair.

Foreign portfolio investments have been shrinking, with overseas investors pulling US$2.8 billion from rupiah government bonds and its stock market until June this year.

The rupiah is at four-year lows against the dollar, with losses of more than 5% this year, although most of that has been in line with the broad decline in emerging market currencies owing to rising U.S. yields and a rising dollar.

Investors seeking higher-yielding bonds have also been switching to India, whose bonds not only have comparable yields but have also just made it into JP Morgan's global index.

The selling has sent yields on Indonesia's 10-year bonds up 35 basis points since late May, to 7.05%.

IT'S NOT ALL BAD

Some investors are giving Prabowo the benefit of the doubt, pointing to how his administration also plans to increase revenues, improve tax compliance, and cap the fiscal deficit at 2.8% of GDP, even if higher than this year's 2.3% target.

"He’s also talking about the need to increase fiscal revenue ... so it’s actually not entirely about increasing expenses," Abrdn's investment manager of Asia fixed income, Jerome Tay, said. Tay is overweight and positive on Indonesian government bonds in the medium term.

Those bonds have long been a favorite among emerging market investors for their 'carry' or high yield.

The spread between Indonesian and U.S. bond yields is currently half the 600 basis points it used to be before the Federal Reserve started raising rates in 2022, nonetheless, they are still attractive for fixed-income investors.

The country is also now less vulnerable, given foreign holdings account for only 14% of outstanding government bonds. They used to own half the bonds a decade ago.

Expectations that the Fed will soon begin cutting rates are of some comfort to rupiah and Indonesian bond investors, Rudiyanto, a director at local asset management Panin said.

But other risks loom, notably huge debt maturities at around 800 trillion rupiah in 2025, nearly double that this year, although Sri Mulyani has said refinancing will not be a problem, provided the government maintains market confidence.

REUTERS

Editor's Choice: Al-Azhar Grand Imam Meets President-Elect Prabowo Subianto, Discuss Potential Defense Relations

Click here to get the latest news updates from Tempo on Google News

Related News

Vietnam Asks Indonesia to Train Vietnamese Military Officers

1 hari lalu

Vietnam Asks Indonesia to Train Vietnamese Military Officers

Vietnamese President T Lm has asked Indonesia to train Vietnamese military officers.

Read More

Top 3 News: Indonesian Govt Takes Down Thousands of Deepfake Accounts, Contents ahead of Regional Elections

2 hari lalu

Top 3 News: Indonesian Govt Takes Down Thousands of Deepfake Accounts, Contents ahead of Regional Elections

Here is the list of the top 3 news on Tempo English today.

Read More

Indonesia's Prabowo Offers Assistance to Vietnam After Typhoon Yagi Disaster

2 hari lalu

Indonesia's Prabowo Offers Assistance to Vietnam After Typhoon Yagi Disaster

Indonesian Defense Minister and President-elect Prabowo Subianto met with Vietnamese President T Lm in Hanoi on Saturday, Sept. 14.

Read More

Ma'ruf Amin 'Very Happy' as Jokowi's Deputy for 5 Years

3 hari lalu

Ma'ruf Amin 'Very Happy' as Jokowi's Deputy for 5 Years

Vice President Ma'ruf Amin said the cooperation of the cabinet under President Joko Widodo in the 2019-2024 period had gone well.

Read More

Jokowi Launches Wanagama Nusantara, Educational Forest Managed by UGM

3 hari lalu

Jokowi Launches Wanagama Nusantara, Educational Forest Managed by UGM

President Jokowi launched the Wanagama Nusantara area in the Nusantara Capital City (IKN), East Kalimantan, today, Sept. 13.

Read More

Retno Marsudi Entrusts Palestinian Independence Issue to House in Her Farewell Speech

3 hari lalu

Retno Marsudi Entrusts Palestinian Independence Issue to House in Her Farewell Speech

Minister Retno Marsudi entrusted the issue of Palestinian independence to the DPR during her farewell speech.

Read More

Jokowi Calls on Ministers to Fully Support Prabowo's Program during Final Cabinet Meeting

3 hari lalu

Jokowi Calls on Ministers to Fully Support Prabowo's Program during Final Cabinet Meeting

President Jokowi held his final cabinet meeting and urged all ministers to support president-elect Prabowo Subianto.

Read More

Today's Top 3 News: 12 Most Spoken Languages in the World, Indonesian and Hindi Included

3 hari lalu

Today's Top 3 News: 12 Most Spoken Languages in the World, Indonesian and Hindi Included

Here is the list of the top 3 news on Tempo English today, September 13, 2024.

Read More

Said Abdullah Discusses PDIP's Potential Support for Prabowo's Administration

3 hari lalu

Said Abdullah Discusses PDIP's Potential Support for Prabowo's Administration

PDIP's Chairman of Central Executive Board signaled that the party may support Prabowo's administration under the right circumstances.

Read More

Jokowi Urges Cabinet to Support Prabowo Subianto's Program

3 hari lalu

Jokowi Urges Cabinet to Support Prabowo Subianto's Program

President Jokowi has called upon members of the Advanced Indonesia Cabinet to actively support the incoming administration led by Prabowo Subianto.

Read More