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Indonesia Economy Forum

Big win(but not so big) for both countries, the most important thing is it can pave the way for another bigger collaborations/agreements, both in G20 and living next to each other yet the trade value is not that big.

It's would seem that Morrison did inherit near completed agreement, while at the same time want to convey a sense of continuity to ASEAN in general and to Indonesia in particular.
Lucky guy, Turnbull yang nanem ScoMo yang panen.
Turnbull did a great job cleaning the mess caused by Abott and repair the bilateral relationship also he have a very good relationship with Jokowi, even Jokowi support the idea of Australia joining ASEAN.
 
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Easy solution for that. All you need is to rent from Indonesian owner (albeit operating there by proxy), that way your money went back to Indonesia economy :p:



Looking from these news ;

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-...s-for-indonesia-free-trade-agreement/10174868

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-...oreign-trip-indonesia-for-free-trade/10178532

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-31/australia-and-indonesia-pledge-closer-ties/10189458

It's would seem that Morrison did inherit near completed agreement, while at the same time want to convey a sense of continuity to ASEAN in general and to Indonesia in particular.

Good start, but still not all of it though!8-)

On Morrison: Either way, its a good climate for deal making, Morrison needs to shore up his political clout and Indonesia as well needs non-chinese funds to help us continue or economic programs.
 
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needs non-chinese funds to help us continue or economic programs.
Indeed.
Maybe Jakarta should get more investment from US. https://www.opic.gov

And with the possibility that OPIC funding would be doubled, we can get more $.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/to-counter-china-u-s-looks-to-invest-billions-more-overseas-1535728206

Sidrap is example of project that get opic $.
Sidrap%20Wind%20Farm%203.jpg

In Sulawesi, Indonesia, this newly-inaugurated OPIC-supported wind farm is adding 75 MW of power in a country working to meet growing electricity demand. The PT UPC Sidrap Bayu Energi wind farm, built with the support of $120 million in OPIC financing is diversifying country’s generation mix with a clean source of power and is advancing Indonesia’s goal of increasing renewable energy from six percent of the generation mix in 2014 to 23 percent by 2025

In 2017, OPIC was recognized for supporting the construction of the wind farm, which received a "Smart Project" citation for Best Practices from Project Finance International. This recognition is given to successfully structured and executed infrastructure projects in the Asia-Pacific region.

OPIC is committed to supporting investment in energy, infrastructure and other sectors throughout the Indo-Pacific region. Earlier this month, OPIC Executive Vice President David Bohigian and other OPIC officials visited Indonesia to promote U.S. investment in the region, strengthen partnerships, and find opportunities to work with regional allies on projects that drive economic growth and stability.

source
 
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Big win(but not so big) for both countries, the most important thing is it can pave the way for another bigger collaborations/agreements, both in G20 and living next to each other yet the trade value is not that big.

That the weird thing about Australia - Indonesia relation, there isn't much trade flow going on. For example I've been to many places (nearly all world major cities) and yet I've never been to Australia or New Zealand. Furthermore the only Australian brands I'm familiar with were of clothings brands (example ; 2XU, Billabong, Quicksilver, Speedo) of which I only have 2XU, Sea-to-Summit (outdoor gears), and of course other brands such as Milo, Holden, and Qantas

Indeed.
Maybe Jakarta should get more investment from US. https://www.opic.gov

And with the possibility that OPIC funding would be doubled, we can get more $.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/to-counter-china-u-s-looks-to-invest-billions-more-overseas-1535728206

Sidrap is example of project that get opic $.
Sidrap%20Wind%20Farm%203.jpg

In Sulawesi, Indonesia, this newly-inaugurated OPIC-supported wind farm is adding 75 MW of power in a country working to meet growing electricity demand.

Just because the investment money came from certain country (example ; US) doesn't mean the actual owner (big boss) is also the same. China business interest (thus Beijing interest by extension) has been investing everywhere around the globe using proxy in all kind of form (SPV, joint partnership, etc).

Talking about wind power, although I personally really love renewable energy the premise of wind power and solar photovoltaic in Indonesia aren't that great, even hydropower is limited, and this is due to the nature of Indonesia geography & climate. The only viable renewable energy source in Indonesia is Geothermal and Nuclear
 
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Grab to Invest $250m in Indonesian Start-Ups
source : Link

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Jakarta. Ride-hailing company Grab announced on Wednesday (29/08) that it has set aside Rp 3 trillion ($250 million) to invest in Indonesian start-ups through its newly launched investment arm, Grab Ventures.

Grab Ventures will help Indonesian start-ups grow with mentorship, strategic investment, access to the market and technology.

Grab, which is interested in investing in logistics, food, fintech and other O2O start-ups, will later integrate them into its own ecosystem.

Grab Ventures is part of Grab 4 Indonesia Master Plan, aiming to support the country in becoming the largest digital economy in the region by 2020. A similar initiative was launched by the company in Singapore in June.

Indonesia's E-Commerce Market Will Grow to $65b by 2020: McKinsey
source : Link

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Jakarta. Online sales of physical goods in Indonesia are projected to increase more than eightfold to $65 billion annually by 2020, a study by global business consultancy McKinsey & Company shows.

The report titled, "The digital archipelago: How online commerce is driving Indonesia's economic development," concludes that government support, large numbers of young, digitally savvy consumers and increased participation by micro, small and medium enterprises in e-commerce will drive the digital economy and boost online sales over the next five years.

"We think there will be leapfrog growth for Indonesia's e-commerce sales in the coming years, which is boosted by the number of internet users," McKinsey Indonesia president director Philia Wibowo told reporters in Jakarta on Wednesday (29/08)
 
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Indonesia set to rank among worlds` five largest textile producers
Kamis, 6 September 2018 14:29 WIB - 6 Views

Reporter: Antara

antarafoto-pameran3-perkembangan-batik-jakarta-260618-riv-3.jpg

Indonesian textiles. (ANTARA FOTO/Rivan Awal Lingga)

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Industry Minister Airlangga Hartarto said the Indonesia is set to break into the rank of five largest textile producers in the world.

Indonesia`s textiles and textile products (TPT) are highly competitive in global market that expansion could place Indonesia among the world`s largest TPT producers and suppliers, the Minister said here on Thursday .

The government has continued to push for the expansion of the TPT industry, he said.

TPT industry could have greater contribution to the country`s economy especially as it is labor intensive and export oriented, he said.

"The government is confident that TPT industry could expand and grow placing the country among the rank of world`s largest producers of textiles especially as the structure of the country`s TPT industry is integrated from the upstream to downstream sectors and the quality its products have been well known in the global market," the Minister said.

Meanwhile, he said, a number of strategic steps have been prepared that the country`s TPT industry could enter the digital era , adding, in three years to come the Industry Ministry is set to jack up the capacity of the upstream sector to promote synthetic fiber production.?

Among the steps to be taken is cooperation with or to attract investment by companies producing high quality synthetic fiber, he said, adding ?This also would reduce dependence on imports."

Other attempts include to encourage utilization of digital technology such as 3D printing, automation, and internet of things, he said.

"Transformation is believed to be able to optimize efficiency and productivity. Therefore, we will develop clusters of integrated textile industry connected to technology of Industry 4.0.," he said.

In line with the economic growth and and shift in demand from basic clothing to functional dress such as sport clothing, the country`s TPT industry needs to increase its production capacity, he said.

Director of Textile, Leather, Footwear and Multifarious Industries of the Industry Ministry Muhdori expressed optimism that the country`s TPT industry could grow 4-6 percent this year.

Last year the industry grew 3.45 percent - a significant growth from the previous year`s growth of 1.76 percent, Muhdori noted.

?Around 30 percent of the country`s production of ready made wear is to meet domestic consumption and the bulk of 70 percent is exported," he said.

The Industry Ministry recorded that the export value of the country`s TPT products reached US$12.58 billion in 2017 or an increase of 6 percent from the previous year.

In addition, the TPT industry contributed Rp150.43 trillion to the country`s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2017, Muhdori said.

Currently the government is seeking comprehensive economic cooperation with the United States and the European Union to expand the market of the country`s TPT.

"Currently, the United States and Europe are among our targets of market expansion for out TPT," Muhduri said.

Reporting by Sella Panduarsa Gareta
Editing by A Saragih, Eliswan

Editor: Fardah Assegaf

COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2018
 
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Let's Talk about the elephant in the room:

I.e: Indonesia's Currency Woes

Another Indonesian Financial Crisis? Not Quite.
Indonesia’s rupiah is nearing levels last seen in the Asian Financial Crisis. Here’s why this time is different.
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By James Guild
September 05, 2018
The Indonesian rupiah fell to 14,730 against the U.S. dollar on August 31, prompting Bank Indonesia to burn through $200 million in foreign currency reserves purchasing government bonds, something it has been doing regularly since the beginning of the year. There are reports that exporters are holding onto their dollars so they won’t get caught flat-footed if the currency weakens further, and yields on government bonds have been steadily inching upward. Several press reports have noted that the currency is closing in on its nadir from the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997-1998, when it hit 16,800 against the dollar, and the central bank has raised interest rates five times in recent months to try and stem capital outflows. The question many are asking is whether Indonesia is nearing the precipice of another crisis, similar to the currency flight from the late 1990s that ultimately toppled the Suharto regime.

While capital markets are tricky to predict, there are many important differences between today and 1997, not the least of which is the scale of the rupiah’s depreciation. During the Asian Financial Crisis, the rupiah fell from 2,000 to a low of 16,800 over the course of a few months, a decrease in value of 840 percent. By comparison, although in absolute terms the rupiah is pushing close to its crisis levels from two decades ago, it started from a much lower position and so doesn’t have nearly as far to fall. In relative terms, the currency has only shed about 9 percent since the beginning of the year and it has been a gradual decline. Noting that the rupiah is nearing its lowest level in 20 years is therefore a fairly superficial comparison, as the relative decline is nowhere near that of two decades ago.

Moreover, the rupiah’s weakening is in line with a broader overall trend in emerging market currencies, largely in response to the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision to begin bumping up interest rates. That is to say, a lot of currencies are feeling the heat right now – this is not a uniquely Indonesian or even Asia-Pacific phenomenon. This is because when interest rates rise in the United States, investors typically reduce their exposure in emerging markets as they move funds back to U.S. assets, and this hits economies running current account deficits — like Indonesia — even harder as they have to borrow in foreign currencies to make up the difference. Argentina and Turkey’s currency woes have also likely made investors even more skittish about emerging market currencies like Indonesia’s.

From a macroeconomic perspective, the rupiah’s slide has not only been relatively gradual (especially compared to the Asian Financial Crisis) but also fairly predictable given the Fed’s monetary tightening. It is of course always possible that, human behavior being what it is, investors will panic and continue to sell off Indonesian assets, especially as the currency’s continued weakening becomes a sort of negative feedback loop, which can be hard to break out of. But from a big picture perspective the rupiah is just one of many currencies being squeezed, and one that is in reasonably good shape to defend itself, having started the year with over $130 billion in foreign exchange reserves for just such a contingency.

To improve its current account deficit, the government has announced it will curb imports. But in fact the balance of trade doesn’t look too bad, running a surplus in June before widening into a $2 billion deficit in July. In the second quarter of 2018, the country was running a current account deficit of about $8 billion, with surging imports in capital and consumer goods pushing the deficit higher. While this trade imbalance is putting pressure on the rupiah, it is also a sign that the economic fundamentals of the country are pretty solid. Strong demand for imported consumer goods suggests aggregate demand in the economy is healthy, while increased imports of heavy machinery and capital goods is a sign of investment in things that drive long-run economic growth, like infrastructure. Running a $2 billion trade deficit (which is only a tiny fraction of the country’s $1 trillion GDP) to meet strong consumer demand and investment in the bones of long-term growth is hardly unsound economic policy.

When it comes to debt, Indonesia is also looking pretty good, as there is a legal cap on how large of a deficit the government can run in any fiscal year – 3 percent of GDP. This policy came from many hard-learned lessons over the years of foreign creditors offering olive branches during good times that turned into crippling liabilities during down times. The upshot is that the government finally learned its lesson, and now generally keeps away from over-exposing itself to debt traps. With almost $120 billion remaining in foreign currency reserves and a low debt-to-GDP ratio, Indonesia’s public finances are in a pretty sound position to continue defending the currency.

The bigger concern is probably from debt incurred by state-owned companies. Over the last year, the government – limited as it is by the 3 percent cap on deficit-spending – has been pushing state-owned companies to take on more debt in order to share the burden of financing big-ticket infrastructure projects. One of the most vulnerable is state-owned utility company PLN, which just issued $2 billion in dollar-denominated bonds. In the last year or two they have also loaded up on debt from a variety of international banks and lending consortiums, earmarked for power plant development projects, and have billions of dollars in purchase agreements with independent plants that sell them power at a fixed rate.

Almost all of this debt and purchased power is denominated in dollars, which is problematic as the utility’s revenue is paid in rupiah. Furthermore, the retail rates it charges customers have been frozen until the end of the 2019 election cycle, so in a crunch it’s going to be hard-pressed to raise funds from operations. In its own internal calculations, PLN assumes a 10 percent decrease in the currency as a “worst-case scenario” and maintains sufficient reserves for that eventuality. Yet the rupiah has already slid 9 percent with four months left in 2018, which naturally raises some questions about whether PLN is sufficiently capitalized to satisfy its expanding debt burden if the rupiah continues to weaken.

And in all likelihood, it will continue to weaken. The Fed is likely going to raise rates again later this year, and investors will continue to turn a wary eye on emerging market currencies like Indonesia’s. While government efforts to reduce the current account deficit might help alleviate some of the pressure, it won’t happen overnight. But even as the rupiah approaches its all-time low from two decades ago, it is important to note that the economic fundamentals this time around are very different.

The rupiah’s slide is being driven by rate hikes in the United States, and it is not alone as many emerging market currencies are finding themselves shedding value against the dollar. This time, the government’s finances are in much better shape, with modest debt and a large stockpile of foreign reserves to help smooth out the rupiah’s ride. Moreover, the current account deficit is in some ways a sign that the economy is experiencing healthy levels of consumer demand and investment in infrastructure and long-term economic assets. While state-owned companies like PLN might find themselves in a jam if the currency continues to fall, the overall picture of Indonesia’s economy is pretty good and comparisons between 2018 and 1998 don’t actually tell us very much.

Having said all that, if the rupiah continues to weaken it will surely be cause for worry to Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, who is up for re-election in April of next year. Whatever the reason for the currency’s decline, it will not be a good look for the incumbent president if the nation’s currency reaches levels that bring back memories of the Asian Financial Crisis, make imported goods pricier, and force big-ticket infrastructure projects to be shelved because foreign parts are too expensive. That is the kind of material tailor-made for attack ads, and even if the economy’s fundamentals are quite different from those of the late 1990s, a plunge in the currency right before the election might mean Jokowi ends up sharing the same fate as Suharto anyway.

James Guild is a Ph.D. candidate at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. He studies the political economy of Southeast Asia, with a concentration on Indonesia. His work has previously appeared in The Diplomat, Inside Indonesia, and New Mandala. Follow him on twitter @jamesjguild

Sri Lanka most at risk of the next emerging market currency crisis: Nomura
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Sri Lanka is at the top of a list of seven emerging market countries that Nomura believes are most likely to experience a currency crisis. Tuul and Bruno Morandi / Alamy Stock Photo
by Sarah Turner

Sri Lanka is at the top of a list of seven emerging market countries that Nomura believes are most likely to join nations such as Turkey and Argentina in a currency crisis.

Nomura economists are estimating that the fourth quarter of this year will be the point at which global monetary conditions switch over from loose to tight for the first time since the GFC.

The team took a deep dive into how the changing markets backdrop - of which monetary conditions are one facet – could work to further weigh on the prospects for the emerging markets that have attracted large amounts of investor capital over the last ten years.

Given the developments that have already taken place this year in countries such as Argentina, "the question of which countries are more vulnerable is of utmost importance," the economists said.

Nomura's "Damocles" model showed Sri Lanka, South Africa, Argentina, Pakistan, Egypt, Turkey and Ukraine as the next in line for an exchange rate crisis.

"Sri Lanka is at risk of a crisis erupting at any time," the economists noted.

That is due to still-weak fiscal finances and a very fragile external position, they said.

"With foreign exchange reserves of less than five months of import cover and high short-term external debt of around $US160 billion, its refinancing needs are large. Political stability also remains an issue."

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Pockets of strength

The economists used eight indicators as they tried to predict the next emerging market currency crisis - import cover, short-term external debt/exports, exchange rate reserves/short-term external debt, broad money/exchange rate reserves and real short-term interest rate.

Non-foreign direct investment gross inflows over one and three years, fiscal and current account, and current account and real effective exchange rate deviation were taken into account.

While there were some standout areas of weakness there were some pockets of strength as well. Eight countries – Brazil, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Peru, Philippines, Russia and Thailand – scored zero on the model.

"This is an important result. As investors focus more on risk, it is important not to lump all emerging markets together as one homogeneous group," the economists said.

Overall, "in many ways, emerging markets are sailing into uncharted waters," they noted.

The picture is changing for capital inflows into emerging markets, the economists said, while projecting weaker inflows ahead.

Interest rates have started to rise in the US and that is attracting investors back to US assets, with the US dollar index rising more than 7 per cent from its lows hit earlier in the year.

Times have changed

Higher oil prices are good for some oil exporters such as Saudi Arabia, Russia, Nigeria, Ecuador and Colombia, the Nomura economists noted, but bad news for the majority of emerging market economies which are net oil importers.

"As such [they] face widening current account deficits (or shrinking surpluses), particularly in Asia," the economists noted.

The economists also said that there are some new factors in play in emerging markets, compared to twenty years ago.

For example assets under management at the top 500 asset management firms in the world have now reached approximately the same size of global GDP, they said, and these firms have invested heavily in emerging markets.

That raises questions of what could happen if these firms decided to retreat en-masse from emerging market debt markets and whether algorithmic trading and passive investment strategies could lead to more herding behaviour in such a move, the economists noted.

The Discussion:

Risk of Currency Crises
Currently, the only Fundamental and internal cause of Indonesia's currency problems is the Current Account Deficit. This means that more money is flowing out then flowing in - causing a lower demand for the Rupiah and thus a fall in value.

The CAD is the reason why Indonesia's Rupiah is faring worse than most of its peers in ASEAN - with the exception of the Phillipines. Apart from external shocks such as the US rate hikes and contagion fears from Argentina and Turkey, this CAD adds additional pressure on the Rupiah, since not only is investor money flowing back in America from Indonesia, trader & consumer money is also flowing outward.

Despite that Indonesia has many strong fundamentals that can help counter this - fundamentals that did not exist in 1998.
  1. Raising average minimum wage: We all heard it, Civil Servants are having their wages increased, across the provinces, minimum wages have been increasing gradually. As reported from Bloomberg:
    "As the emerging market contagion turns the Indonesian rupiah into the second-worst currency in Asia, the nation’s consumers have one reprieve: rising wages.

    Average minimum wages in Indonesia has risen to about $152 per month, which is 42 percent higher compared to five years ago and eight times what it was in 1998 when the rupiah was just as weak, official data show."
    This also means that although the poorest, as usual, would be the hardest hit, they are comparatively better protected than in 1998. These wage increases also means that Indonesian consumers are more prepared to withstand price surges, should they happen.
  2. Strong Foreign Reserves: In 1998, our foreign reserves were 18.6 Billion USD, now it is 118.2 Billion. If counted in today's dollars, our foreign reserves were 28.76 Billion USD. Even counting inflation, our reserves today are 6 times higher than in 1998. While reserves alone cannot reverse negative sentiment in rupiah, can can ensure a gradual, controlled decline that prevents business rupture and crashes. That would put Indonesia's markets in a better state to quickly recover once shocks reside.
  3. Active Central Bank: The BI is among the most active central banks in South-East Asia, and has gone into overdrive to safeguard investor confidence. While hot-money has nonetheless flowed out, both long-term and medium term foreign investors have been reassured and continue to put trust in Indonesian Investments. The Nomura report that has just been released recently should further increase confidence. Also note that unlike during the 1998 crises, the BI is not following IMF advise and does not have to enact short-sighted monetary policy that damages the overall market confidence.
Furthermore, we also do not need to fear a Banking Crises, due to these factors:

  • Truely excessive amounts of Bank Liquidity: Indonesia's banks have a Capital Adequacy Ratio of 22%
ipc_indonesia_capital-adequacy-ratio

Capital Adequacy Ratio, or CAR, is a measure of the amount of funds banks have on hand to pay sudden expenses compared to their total assets. Basically, its the amount of Liquidity banks have. The above is a graph of the average CAR for all the commercial banks (inc. State Owned Banks) in Indonesia.

By International standards, namely Basil III accords, the average CAR needs to be 10.5%. Above that is healthy, 15% and above is considered great liquidity rate. Our current rate is excessive. Why? Because that 7% liquidity rate above 15% means that on average, 7% of bank funds can be invested without putting the bank into risk of collapse.

In any other situation, that opportunity cost would be punishing. This time though, in this specific situation, it is a godsend. It means that Banks are equipped - to the point of overkill, to withstand and overcome shocks, be it domestic or external.

  • Better Regulation and Proactive Policy
The OJK and BI have been active these last several years in actively minimising risky behaviour of investors and financial institutions. As you all might have seen in the news, cryptocurrencies have been severely curtailed, and financial institutions that engage in unsecured, risky behaviour without proper safeguards have been - in the worst cases, closed down.

BI has also been proactive, the continuous benchmark interest rate hikes ahead of the Fed hikes have ensured that Indonesian Bonds continued to be competitive in the international market ensuring that at least long term investors kept their Indonesian bonds. BI has also been prudent - its policy of only cushioning the fall of the Rupiah instead of artificially keeping it high has deterred speculators while reassuring businessmen.

  • International Support and Recognition
Indonesia has continued to enjoy investment grade ranking from the Big Three analysts, S&P, Moody's and JPmorgan. Furthermore, Indonesia's current plight is both understood and promoted by leading international financial news outlets, including Financial Times and Bloomberg. Just see these titles:

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...indonesian-consumers-can-bank-on-rising-wages

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...h-on-indonesia-stocks-despite-wave-of-caution

https://www.cnbc.com/video/2018/09/...piah-depends-on-other-markets-strategist.html

By and far international discourse on Indonesia's financial condition paints the same picture: Indonesia has strong fundamentals, but is being dragged down by external shocks and its current account deficit, despite correct and proactive government action. Discussion is not focused on will a crises erupt but rather how deep will this go and when will it recover?

Yes, times are tough, but times were tough during the 2008 GFC, during the 2013 Taper Tantrum. We've pulled through in time, and more than made up for loss time. We have not reached the bottom. I predict that our Rupiah will pass the 15k/1 USD mark, and settle somewhere between 15k and 16k. So things will continue to get worse, unless the BI is willing to continue to hike interest rates, and the Finance Ministry and OJK follow up with supporting policies. Even then, growth will probably decrease as a result, and growth in the second semester of 2018 will be below 5%.

Despite that, there is no need to fear a crises. Indonesia is above that. We have the economic momentum to do so, and the same quality of financial leadership that allowed us to survive the 2008 Great Financial Crises and the 2013 Taper Tantrum. Regardless of how the upcoming elections go, Indonesia's economy is projected to be well into recovery by then.
 
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Fifty percent of Jakarta-Cikampek elevated road completed
Selasa, 11 September 2018 22:01 WIB - 3 Views

Reporter: Antara

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Elevated Jakarta-Cikampek II toll road (ANTARA PHOTO/Risky Andrianto)

Bekasi, W Java (ANTARA News) - State-owned road construction firm PT Jasa Marga said that the construction of the Jakarta-Cikampek II (Elevated) toll road has almost reached 50 percent this September 2018.

"If there are no obstacles, then the toll road can be operational next year (2019)," Jasa Marga President Director Desi Arryani stated.

She made the statement during a working visit by the management directors of PT Jasa Marga to the Jakarta-Cikampek II (Elevated) Toll Road from Monday night (Sept 10) to Tuesday (Sept 11) early morning.

This working visit was intended to directly monitor the development of the 36.40-kilometer toll road project.

The working visit was followed by Jasa Marga Subakti Syukur`s Operations Director II and Jasa Marga`s Development Director Adrian Priohutomo.

The board of directors was received by President Director of PT Jasamarga Jalanlayang Cikampek (JJC) Djoko Dwijono and Head of Jakarta-Cikampek II (Elevated) Toll Road Project Iwan Dewantoro.

PT JJC, as a subsidiary of Jasa Marga, is the manager of the Jakarta-Cikampek II (Elevated) Toll Road.

On this occasion, the entourage had the opportunity to monitor three different technical jobs, namely Sosro Bahu placement at KM 20 + 700, installation of erection steel box girder in KM 23 + 200, and KM 32 + 050 for installation of "segmental pier head.

The three technical jobs are carried out at window time, which is 23.00-05.00 local time (WIB).

"We hope that during the Lebaran or Eid al-Fitr 2019 homecoming flows, this toll road can operate in stages, reaching 85-90 percent. We hope this could be achieved," Arryani remarked.

He added that the construction of the Jakarta-Cikampek II (Elevated) Toll Road, which was carried out in conjunction with the construction of other projects, such as Light Rail Transit (LRT) and Cibitung-Cilincing Toll Road, was admittedly less ideal.

"But we have to do this because if it is not done, the traffic between Jakarta and Cikampek will be even worse," she added.

The Jakarta-Cikampek II (Elevated) Toll Road lies above the existing Jakarta-Cikampek Toll Road. It stretches from Cikunir to West Karawang section, with a total length of 36.4 kilometers.

This toll road consists of two areas, namely the Cikunir-Cikarang Utama and Cikarang Utama-West Karawang sections.

Later, this toll road will serve vehicles in reducing the long density along the Jakarta-Cikampek Toll Road.

The Layang Jakarta-Cikampek Toll Road is an alternative route for toll road users who will head to Cikampek and Bandung in West Java.

This toll road can also support the distribution of goods and services, both going and coming out of Jakarta from West Java and continuing from or to Central Java to East Java.

Reporting by Andi Firdaus
Editing by Yoseph Hariyadi
(T.A014/A/KR-BSR/A/H-YH) 11-09-2018 21:37:40
Editor: Andi Abdussalam

COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2018
 
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Indonesia, S. Korea sign 15 memorandums of understanding
Rabu, 12 September 2018 13:10 WIB - 0 Views

Reporter: antara

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Industry Minister Airlangga Hartarto (standing third left) witnessed the signing of 15 MoUs conducted by Indonesian-South Korean government companies and institutions at the 2018 Business and Investment Forum in Seoul, Monday (10/9). (ANTARA News/ Biro Humas Kementerian Perindustrian)

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Indonesian and South Korean government institutions and companies have signed 15 memorandums of understanding (MoU) during President Joko Widodo`s two-day visit to that country ending Tuesday.

The agreements signed in South Korea were on investment cooperation in various sectors including energy, property, machines, technology and cosmetics with total investment commitment of US$5.76 billion business to business.

"We are very open for investment flowing into Indonesia," chairman of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry Rosan P Roeslani said received here on Wednesday.

Rosan said there are still many trade and investment potentials between South Korea and Indonesia that need explorations.

"This shows improvement in the already strong trade and investment relations between Indonesia and South Korea," Rosan said.

The agreements include the industrial sector between Hyundai Engineering and PT Sulfindo Adiusaha to develop chemical industry to produce vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) and poly vinyl chloride (PVC) in Merak, Banten, at a cost of US$200 million;. between Doosan Infracore and PT Boma Bisma Indra and PT Equiti Manajemen Teknologi on development of diesel engine factory with an investment of US$185 million; and between SD Biotechnologies and PT Orion Pratama Sentosa to build cosmetic industry valued at US$20 million in Karawang, West Java.

There was also strategic partnership in the development of machine tool technology center in Bandung, West Java as a collaboration between the Korea Institute for Advancement of Technology and the Industry Ministry.

Rosan was a member of the presidential entourage to Korea also including Industry Minister Airlangga Hartarto, head of the Investment Coordinating Board Thomas Lembong and head of Bekraf Triawan Munaf.

Reporting by Sella Panduarsa Gareta
Editing by Suharto
Editor: Heru Purwanto

COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2018
 
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No wonder if this case is much Bigger than 1MDB Case .... If this news is true ...It looks that SBY is more professional to steal money than Najib Razak ....:yahoo::enjoy:

Indonesia’s SBY Government: ‘Vast Criminal Conspiracy’

September 11, 2018
By: John Berthelsen
berthelsen-weston.jpg

The Indonesian government that left power in 2014 was a vast criminal conspiracy that stole as much as US$12 billion from taxpayers and laundered it through international banks, with as many as 30 officials in on the scheme, according to a massive 488-page investigation filed with the Mauritian Supreme Court last week.

The report, a forensic analysis known as a testament in evidence, was compiled by a task force of investigators and lawyers in Indonesia, London, Thailand, Singapore, Japan and other countries, that was filed along with an 80-page affidavit containing the allegations. It also implicates a string of international financial institutions including Nomura, Standard Chartered Bank, United Overseas Bank (Singapore) and others.

Bank Century the Start

Much of the fraud is alleged to revolve around the creation and subsequent failure of the notorious PT Bank Century Tbk, which capsized spectacularly in 2008 and which was colloquially known as “SBY’s bank,” a reference to then-President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono because it was believed to contain slush funds tied to the Democratic Party, which Yudhoyono heads. The bank was recapitalized in 2008 and renamed Bank Mutiara.

The current fraud involves a mysterious ¥97.682 billion (US$989.1 million) rights offering by the J Trust financial group in Tokyo in 2013, which gave J Trust the resources to purchase Bank Century, which was taken over by the government, recapitalized after hundreds of millions of dollars were stolen, and renamed Bank Mutiara in 2009.

https://www.asiasentinel.com/politics/indonesia-sby-government-criminal-conspiracy/
 
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Bali airport wins big at Airport Service Quality Awards
source : Link

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Ngurah Rai International Airport in Bali has been recognized as the 2017 world’s best airport at the Airport Service Quality Awards for the category of airports serving 15 to 25 million passengers per year

Announced on Wednesday in Nova Scotia, Canada, the airport also bagged two other awards, namely Asia-Pacific’s best airport by size and region in the 15 to 25 million passengers per year category and the second-best airport in Asia-Pacific among those serving over 2 million passengers per year.

Managed by state-owned airport operator Angkasa Pura I (AP I), last year, the airport was recognized as the world’s third-best airport in the 15 to 25 million passengers per year category.


The annual survey was conducted by Montreal-based Airport Council International (ACI) and involved around 600,000 passengers.

In addition to the Bali airport, two other airports managed by AP I, namely Juanda International Airport in Surabaya, East Java, and Sepinggan International Airport in Balikpapan, East Kalimantan, also received recognition.

The former was named the world’s third-best airport in the 15 to 25 million passengers category. Meanwhile, Sepinggan Airport was recognized as the world’s second-best airport in the 5 to 15 million passengers category.

AP I director Faik Fahmi said in a statement that the awards were considered a form of appreciation for the organization’s commitment to continuously improving its services and the customer experience for passengers. (jes/kes)

Im impress with our local startup, another Unicorn in the making.

Indonesian fintech startup Moka raises $24M led by Sequoia India
source : Link

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Indonesia’s Moka, a startup that helps SMEs and retailers manage payment and other business operations, has pulled in a $24 million Series B round for growth.

The investment is led by Sequoia India and Southeast Asia — which recently announced a new $695 million fund — with participation from new backers SoftBank Ventures Korea, EDBI — the corporate investment arm of Singapore’s Economic Development Board — and EV Growth, the later stage fund from Moka seed investor East Ventures. Existing investors Mandiri Capital, Convergence and Fenox also put into the round.

Moka was started four years ago primarily as a point-of-sale (POS) terminal with some basic business functionality. Today, it claims to work with 12,500 retailers in Indonesia and its services include sales reports, inventory management, table management, loyalty programs, and more. Its primary areas of focus are retailers in the F&B, apparel and services industries. It charges upwards of IDR 249,000 ($17) per month for its basic service and claims to be close to $1 billion in annual transaction volume from its retail partners.
 
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No wonder if this case is much Bigger than 1MDB Case .... If this news is true ...It looks that SBY is more professional to steal money than Najib Razak ....:yahoo::enjoy:

Indonesia’s SBY Government: ‘Vast Criminal Conspiracy’

September 11, 2018
By: John Berthelsen
berthelsen-weston.jpg

The Indonesian government that left power in 2014 was a vast criminal conspiracy that stole as much as US$12 billion from taxpayers and laundered it through international banks, with as many as 30 officials in on the scheme, according to a massive 488-page investigation filed with the Mauritian Supreme Court last week.

The report, a forensic analysis known as a testament in evidence, was compiled by a task force of investigators and lawyers in Indonesia, London, Thailand, Singapore, Japan and other countries, that was filed along with an 80-page affidavit containing the allegations. It also implicates a string of international financial institutions including Nomura, Standard Chartered Bank, United Overseas Bank (Singapore) and others.

Bank Century the Start

Much of the fraud is alleged to revolve around the creation and subsequent failure of the notorious PT Bank Century Tbk, which capsized spectacularly in 2008 and which was colloquially known as “SBY’s bank,” a reference to then-President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono because it was believed to contain slush funds tied to the Democratic Party, which Yudhoyono heads. The bank was recapitalized in 2008 and renamed Bank Mutiara.

The current fraud involves a mysterious ¥97.682 billion (US$989.1 million) rights offering by the J Trust financial group in Tokyo in 2013, which gave J Trust the resources to purchase Bank Century, which was taken over by the government, recapitalized after hundreds of millions of dollars were stolen, and renamed Bank Mutiara in 2009.

https://www.asiasentinel.com/politics/indonesia-sby-government-criminal-conspiracy/

LOL, Century bank was injected (bailing out) by Indonesian Central Bank only about 508 million USD due to financial crisis (2008). How come the number become 12 billion USD ????? It is quite difficult to accuse this policy as some thing wrong during 2008 financial crisis, but it is true that the way the bailing out is implemented is not 100 % clean, because of that Century Bank owner right now is in prison.

This is more news about Century Case

Court orders KPK to continue Bank Century probe
  • Kharishar Kahfi
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta | Tue, April 10, 2018 | 03:15 pm
2017_08_24_31505_1503569773._large.jpg

Under investigation: The South Jakarta District Court has ruled on Monday that the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) must continue its investigation into the 2008 Bank Century bailout, which involved former high-ranking officials of Bank Indonesia (pictured). (JP/Wienda Parwitasari)

The South Jakarta District Court has ordered the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) to continue its investigation into the 2008 Bank Century bailout, which reportedly caused more than Rp 7 trillion (US$508 million) in state losses.

On Monday, sole judge Efendi Muhtar ruled in favor of antigraft activists grouped under the Indonesian Anti-Corruption Community (MAKI), who had filed a pretrial motion against the antigraft body accused of being 'slow' in handling the case.

“[We are] ordering [the KPK] to move on with the investigation […] of alleged corruption related to the Bank Century [bailout],” said Efendi when he read out the ruling on Monday.

The judge said the KPK had to name several figures implicated in the case – including former vice president and then-Bank Indonesia governor Boediono and former Financial Services Authority chairman and then-BI deputy governor Muliaman D. Hadad – as suspects in the case.

“With the ruling, there’s no reason for the KPK not to name new suspects in the Bank Century bailout case,” MAKI coordinator Boyaman Saiman said.

He said MAKI would ask for the official copy of the ruling before handing it out to the KPK and the House of Representatives to monitor its implementation by the antigraft body.

The KPK’s investigation into the case has been in limbo since the Jakarta Corruption Court sentenced the first suspect in the case, former BI deputy governor Budi Mulya, to 10 years of imprisonment in July 2014.

Previously, prosecutors’ indictment against Budi mentioned Boediono and Muliaman’s names, as well as other then-BI board of director members, of playing a role in the case.
 
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Ministry launches intensive export promotion to China
Kamis, 13 September 2018 19:04 WIB - 0 Views

Reporter: Sella Panduarsa Gareta

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Director General of National Export Development, Arlinda (Antaranews.com / HO)

Jakarta (ANTARA News)- The Ministry of Trade is intensifying the penetration of export markets in China, one of which is by displaying its potential of superior products and the typical culture of the archipelago to the world stage through the international exhibition "The 15th China-ASEAN Expo (CAEXPO) 2018."

"The Ministry of Trade`s participation in CAEXPO is one of the efforts to increase market access to China as an export destination country," Director General of National Export Development of the Ministry of Trade Arlinda stated through a written statement received in Jakarta on Wednesday.

According to Arlinda, Indonesia`s regular participation in CAEXPO is a commitment to establish trade cooperation with China and other ASEAN countries.

The exhibition themed "Jointly Building The 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, Forging A China-ASEAN Community of Innovation" was held from Sept 12 to 15, 2018, at the International Convention and Exhibition, Nanning, China.

This year, Indonesia presents the Commodity Pavilion and the National Pavilion. The Commodity Pavilion, covering an area of 2,160 square meters, was followed by 66 Indonesian businessmen featuring products, including furniture; food and beverages; fashion; accessories and jewelry; home decor and consumer goods; herbal and beauty products; and spas.

The National Pavilion has promoted the province of West Sumatra to become the City of Charm of Indonesia to promote Indonesian cultural diversity. West Sumatra has tourism, economic, and investment potential. The tourism potential offered includes marine tourism, cultural tourism, and environmental tourism.

In addition, West Sumatra also has a unique culinary world, namely rendang.

The National Pavilion is in number 7 of the City of Charm hall and is built on an area of 108 square meters.

Besides exhibiting products, the Ministry of Trade will also hold an "Indonesia Trade and Investment Forum" on Sept 13, 2018.

The event presented the Governor of the Province of West Sumatra, Irwan Prayitno, as a resource person who spoke of opportunities for trade, investment, and tourism cooperation in West Sumatra.

"We invite all visitors to the CAEXPO exhibition to get to know Indonesia more closely by visiting the two Indonesian pavilions and participating in the `Indonesia Trade and Investment Forum`," Arlinda remarked.

During the exhibition, Indonesian companies in the Pacific Construction Group will also sign a memorandum of cooperation (MoC) with a Chinese company, Famindo International Sentral Teknologi.

The Chinese company is engaged in construction, such as construction in industrial estates, steam power plants, deep water ports, and housing related facilities. *** 3 ***

Reporting by Sella Panduarsa Gareta
Editing by Andi Abdussalam
Editor: Bustanuddin

COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2018
 
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Go-Jek in talks to raise at least $2 billion in funding
  • Yoolim Lee
    Bloomberg
Singapore | Sun, September 16, 2018 | 06:54 pm
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Lady drivers from Go-Viet, a collaborative local ride-hailing app in Vietnam with Go-jek, set to parade its maiden operation in Hanoi, Vietnam on Sept. 12. (JP/Stefanno Reinard)

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Go-Jek, Indonesia’s most valuable technology startup, is in talks to raise at least $2 billion to fuel an accelerated expansion overseas, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter.

The Jakarta-based company plans to close the funding round in several weeks, the person said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. The startup’s existing backers include Tencent Holdings, Temasek Holdings and Warburg Pincus.

Go-Jek is building up its arsenal to expand in Southeast Asia and fight Singapore-based rival Grab, which bought Uber Technologies’ business in the region and has said it’s on track to raise $3 billion in fresh capital this year. The Indonesian company got its start with ride-hailing and has since added a range of on-demand services that lets users pay bills, order food and buy movie tickets.

Representatives from Go-Jek weren’t immediately reachable for comment outside normal business hours.

Go-Jek has turned to acquisitions in recent years to build a group of leaders overseeing different businesses.

“We are building a strong bench who really want to make a change in Indonesia and in Southeast Asia as we expand,” Go-Jek President Andre Soelistyo told a panel at the Milken Institute Asia Summit on Friday.

Go-Jek was founded in Jakarta and has been expanding beyond the Indonesian market it dominates.

It began motorcycle hailing and courier delivery services in Hanoi on Sept. 12 after a soft launch in Ho Chi Minh City. “Go-Viet,” its brand in Vietnam, is the first of the company’s international operations. The app has been downloaded 1.5 million times in six weeks and 25,000 drivers have joined the platform, according to the company.

Go-Viet plans to roll out additional services such as car-hailing, food delivery and e-money services in a country that is home to more than 90 million people.

“Consumers need more choice and the market needs more competition to allow the industry to grow sustainably,” Go-Jek Chief Executive Officer Nadiem Makarim said in a statement on Sept. 12. Go-Jek’s planned expansion in Thailand, Singapore and the Philippines is on track, the company said.

The Indonesian startup’s last funding round brought in about $1.5 billion of new capital and valued the company at roughly $5 billion, Bloomberg News has reported.
 
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