Auto Part Makers Plan to Invest $1.5 Billion in 2014, Official Says
By
Harso Kurniawan on 5:43 pm January 17, 2014.
Category
Business,
Corporate News
Tags:
Indonesia auto industry
Several large auto parts makers are expected to spend a combined $1.5 billion in total investment to manufacture automotive products in Indonesia, a high level official at the Industry Ministry said on Wednesday.
“The components industry is likely to also receive big investment, following recent investment in [automotive] assembling,” said Budi Darmadi, director general for high-technology industries at the ministry. He said around 20-30 automotive component makers may invest in the country this year, but did not provide the names of any specific companies.
Budi was speaking on the sidelines of an inauguration ceremony for Honda Prospect Motor’s second factory in Karawang, West Java.
HPM, the sole distributor of Japanese Honda cars in Indonesia, is expecting the new plant to boost production of Honda cars to 200,000 units per year from around 80,000 units currently.
The factory — which saw an investment of Rp 3.1 trillion ($257 million) — will manufacture the Honda Mobilio, a multipurpose vehicle, the company said.
Karawang, around 75 kilometers east of Jakarta, is home to many manufacturers, including Astra Otoparts, the spare parts unit of the Indonesia’s largest automotive distributor — Astra International.
Astra Otoparts and MetalArt of Japan have signed a deal to set up a joint venture that will manufacture auto parts. The partners will spend around $45.3 million and build the plant on 3.2 hectares area in Karawang International Industrial City.
Astra Otoparts, which employs over 36,000 people in Indonesia, has been exporting its products to more than 30 countries in regions including Europe, America, Middle East, Asia Oceania and Africa.
Indonesia continued to enjoy strong car sales last year, despite a higher interest rate environment and accelerating inflation. Car sales stood at 1.2 million in 2013, up around 9 percent.
Car sales in the country were dominated by big Japanese carmakers, with the top spot occupied by Toyota Motor, followed by Daihatsu Motor and Suzuki Motor.
Indonesia Auto Part Makers Plan to Invest $1.5 Billion in 2014, Official Says - The Jakarta Globe
Hankook to Spend $358m on W. Java Plant Expansion
By
Francezka Nangoy on 2:55 pm January 18, 2014.
Category
Business,
Corporate News
Tags:
Hankook Tire
South Korea’s Hankook Tire aims to make 6 million tired per year at its West Java plant. (JG Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)
South Korea’s Hankook Tire is making an additional investment of 380.18 billion won, or $358 million, into its Indonesian plant as it seeks to continue its expansion in Southeast Asia’s largest economy.
In a filing to the Korea Exchange (KRX) on Friday, the company said it would invest the sum with Hankook Tire Indonesia, its local unit in the country.
The investment will be made throughout the course of the next two years, and will be used for “facility improvement,” the statement said.
Hankook Tire Indonesia inaugurated its factory in Cikarang, West Java, in September last year with an initial investment of $353 million. The plant was built on a 60-hectare area of land where the company plans to reach production capacity of six million tires a year.
According to Hankook’s statement in September, some 30 percent of production from Cikarang will be fed to the domestic market. The remaining 70 percent will be exported to other emerging markets in Southeast Asia, North America and the Middle East. The plant will produce tires for passenger vehicles and light trucks, among others.
Seung Hwa Suh, Hankook’s vice chairman and chief executive, said at the plant’s inauguration that the company planned to invest up to $1.1 billion in Indonesia through 2018.
Hankook is not the only company that is banking on Indonesia’s solid demand for automotive-related products.
Astra Otoparts, a unit of Astra International, formed a joint venture with Italy’s Pirelli Tyres last year called Evoluzione Tyre. The newly formed company has invested Rp 1.3 trillion ($107.9 million) in the development of a new tire plant in Subang, West Java, which is scheduled to start production by the end of this year.
The plant will initially produce two million motorcycle tires per year before eventually reaching seven million units a year upon full operation. Sixty percent of its output will be exported, according a statement by Astra Otoparts.
Car sales in Indonesia rose to 1.23 million units in 2013, up 10 percent from 2012, according to data from the Association of Indonesian Automotive Manufacturers (Gaikindo). This year, the association expects roughly the same volume of car sales.
Motorcycle sales were also up in 2013 to 7.77 million units, an increase of 8.8 percent from the previous year, according to the Indonesian Motorcycle Manufacturers Association (AISI), which expects 2014 sales to slow amid high interest rates and production costs.
Hankook to Spend $358m on W. Java Plant Expansion - The Jakarta Globe
Petrokimia Gresik to Open East Java Phosphoric Acid Plant in Q2
By
ID/Rozi Amrozi on 10:24 am January 2, 2014.
Category
Business,
Corporate News
Tags:
fertilizer,
Petrokimia Gresik,
phosphoric acid
Gresik, East Java. Petrokimia Gresik, a sate-run fertilizer company, plans to open a new phosphoric acid plant in East Java in the second quarter of 2014, a company executive said on Tuesday.
“The new phosphoric acid plant, which is a joint venture with [Jordan Phosphate Mines], will be able to contribute to an increase in our revenues in 2014,” said Hidayat Nyakman, the company’s president director.
Jordan Phosphate Mines (JMPC) is a mining company based in phosphate-rich Jordan. Phosphoric acid is an essential component in many commercial fertilizers.
The $200 million plant, which has been under construction since the end of 2010, is expected to produce 200,000 tons of phosphoric acid per year for use in fertilizers on the domestic and foreign markets.
Hidayat said the plant would increase the company’s production capacity and end the need to import raw materials to make fertilizers.
Each company is to take a 50 percent stake in the joint venture, as per a January 2010 agreement.
Petrokimia Gresik also plans to spend $160 million revamping is preexisting plant so that it too can produce 200,000 tons of phosphoric acid per year, and to expand the plant’s industrial compound to include a sulfuric acid plant with a capacity of 600,000 tons per year and a gypsum purification plant with a similar capacity.
“The expansion of this phosphoric acid plant will assure a supply of phosphoric acid and therefore save foreign exchange for the state,” Hidayat said.
The company said it required 600,000 tons of phosphoric acid to produce 2.8 million tons of NPK fertilizer a year, while its current phosphoric acid facility only produced one third that amount.
Nugrohon Purwanto, Petrokimia Gresik’s commercial director, said that the weakening of the Rupiah had significantly impacted the cost of phosphoric acid imports.
“With the operation of the phosphoric acid plant that is a joint venture with JPMC, our efforts to save production costs, which will enhance our competitiveness in the free market in the future, can be improved,” Nugroho said.
The plant will require some 770,000 tons of phosphate and 200,000 tons of sulfur a year to meet its production goals.
The company also plans to complete an upgrade of its water processing installation in Gunung Sari, Surabaya, Hidayat said, increasing its capacity from 720 cubic meters to 3,800 cubic meters per hour.
Govt Seeks to Raise Rp 10t From Bond Sale
By
Jakarta Globe on 3:03 pm January 18, 2014.
Category
Business
Tags:
Indonesia bonds,
Rupiah currency
The government is hoping to raise Rp 10 trillion ($833 million) from the sale of rupiah-denominated bonds with various tenors on Tuesday as part of its efforts to plug the country’s budget deficit.
The government plans to sell one, five, 10 and 15-year bonds, the Finance Ministry’s debt management office said in a statement posted on its website on Thursday, in what will be its second rupiah-denominated bond sale this year.
Southeast Asia’s largest economy raised Rp 10 trillion from selling similar notes on Jan. 7, the first bond sale for this year. Next week’s sale will contribute to a plan to raise Rp 75 trillion from the sale of rupiah-denominated bonds in the first quarter.
Investors have placed Rp 29.6 trillion for bonds on offer, indicating strong demand and suggesting a recovery of foreign investor confidence in the country.
Indonesia wants to raise a record Rp 357 trillion from international and local debt markets this year, it said in a statement early this month.
The country, which has been selling bonds for the past decade, is grappling with a budget deficit amid a depreciating rupiah. Record trade and current account deficits last year partly prompted the central bank to raise its benchmark interest rate to 7.5 percent.
The country’s budget shortfall is forecast to reach Rp 175 trillion, or 1.7 percent of gross domestic product, this year.
The government raised $4 billion from the sale of dollar-denominated bonds on Jan. 8, with $2 billion of notes due in 10 years to yield 5.95 percent and $2 billion of debt maturing in 30 years at 6.85 percent, DMO said in a statement published in Jakarta last week.
The country raised Rp 54 trillion from the sale of rupiah-denominated bonds in the first quarter last year, according to a document from the DMO.
Yields on government five-year notes fell to 7.9807 percent on Friday from 8.0505 percent the previous day while the yield of 10-year notes declined to 8.5596 percent on Friday from 8.5669 percent on Thursday, according to data from the Indonesia Bond Pricing Agency.
Govt Seeks to Raise Rp 10t From Rupiah-Denominated Bonds Sale
Antam Aims to Raise $200m from Bonds in 2014 to Expand Pomalaa Mine
By
Efi Nurfiyasari on 9:54 pm December 2, 2013.
Category
Business
Tags:
Antam
State-controlled mining company Aneka Tambang is considering the sale of $200 million of dollar-denominated bonds in the second half of 2014 to fund the expansion of its nickel mine in Pomalaa, Southeast Sulawesi.
Tato Miraza, president director of Aneka Tambang, also known as Antam, said the notes would be issued in the second half of next year.
He did not disclose the terms including the tenor and yield of the bonds.
Antam seeks to increase ferronickel production from its nickel ore mine.
“The Pomalaa project is one of our focuses to increase production capacity,” Tato said.
Antam’s investment in the mine’s expansion is estimated to reach $573 million. At the moment, the company is still short of $200 million.
Antam last month scrapped its Rp 1 trillion ($85 million) bond issuance — the last part of a Rp 4 trillion bond issuance — as it saw that debt market conditions were conducive for selling the notes.
Once the expansion project has been completed, Antam’s ferronickel production capacity will rise to 27,000 metric tons per year from the current 18,000 tons.
Antam has also allocated Rp 2.9 trillion for its capital expenditure budget in 2014. Most of these funds will be used to expand the Pomalaa project. The capex excludes acquisition costs the company may incur, as it plans to acquire gold-mining companies in order to raise its production of the precious metal.
Antam posted a 44.6-percent decline in net income to Rp 348 billion in the first nine months of this year compared to the same period a year ago.
The company is one of several local firms planning to sell bonds next year.
Mobile communications infrastructure builder Tower Bersama Infrastructure plans to raise between Rp 500 billion and Rp 1 trillion in a bond sale next week. The debt sale is part of a larger plan to raise Rp 4 trillion from bonds issues within two years.
Antam currently operates nickel mines in Pomalaa and Tapunopaka in Southeast Sulawesi, and Tanjung Buli and Pulau Pakal in North Maluku. It has 825.3 wet metric tons of nickel reserves and resources.
Antam’s major projects include development of a $1.6 billion ferronickel project in East Halmahera, North Maluku and a $350 million to $400 million nickel pig-iron project in Mandiodo, Southeast Sulawesi.
The company is also developing a $450 million chemical grade alumina plant with an annual capacity of 300,000 tons in Tayan, West Kalimantan.
Antam Aims to Raise $200m from Bonds in 2014 to Expand Pomalaa Mine - The Jakarta Globe
Jakarta Flooded Again After Night of Heavy Rain
By
Jakarta Globe on 2:19 pm January 19, 2014.
Category
Featured,
Jakarta,
News
Tags:
Indonesia floods,
Jakarta floods flooding
Jalan KH Abdullah Syafii in South Jakarta in inundated by flood on Jan. 19, 2013. (Photo via @TMCPoldaMetro)
Heavy rains in Greater Jakarta left areas of the capital flooded on Sunday, displacing more than 10,000 residents as water levels reached critical levels at area flood gates last night.
Floods were reported in Daan Mogot and Grogol, in West Jakarta; Gunung Sahari and Karet Tengsin, in Central Jakarta; Jatinegara and Kampung Melayu, in East Jakarta; and Cawang, Kalibata, and Tebet, in South Jakarta, according to the Jakarta Police traffic corps. The worst floods were reported in North Jakarta neighborhoods, with Kelapa Gading, Pluit and Penjaringan under water.
“Heavy rains, especially in northern part of Jakarta, have increased water levels at rivers,” Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, the spokesman of the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB), said in a press statement on Sunday. “The condition is causing worse flooding in northern part of Jakarta.”
Jakarta’s flood gates reached critical levels Saturday night as heavy rains fell for hours, raising the water level at the capital’s already high rivers. By Sunday the “
Siaga I,” alert remained for the Karet and Angke Hulu floodgates, but was lowered to “Siaga II,” for the Manggarai flood gate.
TransJakarta suspended operations along two corridors, Corridor III (from Kalideres to Harmoni) and Corridor XII (from Pluit to Tanjung Priok), while service along half of the transit line’s other routes were delayed, according to
@BLUTransJakarta.
Several subdistricts in Tangerang and Bekasi were also inundated by floodwaters.
Heavy rains began to fall early last week in Bogor, West Java, a satellite city upstream from the capital. Flood waters claimed seven lives by Saturday, the Jakarta office of the Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) said. The rains are expected to continue through the coming week, with the heaviest rainfall predicted for Sunday and Thursday nights, the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency (BMKG) said.
“The peak of the rain [season] is predicted to last until early February 2014,” the BMKG said.
So far rain levels are less than last year, when widespread flooding affected much of the capital, killing 20 and displacing more than 30,000.
“Rains that have been falling since the beginning of this year are not as heavy as in 2013,” Achmad Zukri, the head of extreme weather early warning division at BMKG, said. “The rains have been falling in installments since New Year’s Eve. This is unlike last year, when high-intensity rain fell non-stop for several consecutive days.”
Jakarta Flooded Again After Night of Heavy Rain - The Jakarta Globe