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Inflows Rise after BI's Surprise Rate Hike, Official Says

JAKARTA, June 12 (Reuters) - Indonesia's central bank spokesperson said on Friday that ​foreign investors have responded positively to its ‌rare off-cycle interest rate hike and an increase in bond yields, as reflected by a rise in foreign capital ​inflows this week.

Bank Indonesia (BI) raised interest rate by ​25 basis points to 5.50% on Tuesday, aiming ⁠to stabilise the rupiah after it hit a ​series of record lows.

BI recorded a higher foreign ​capital inflow in an auction of up to one-year tenor Bank Indonesia bonds, known as SRBI, on June 10, spokesperson Ramdan Denny Prakoso ​said.

It raised 15 trillion rupiah ($834.49 million) from the ​auction, according to BI's website.

"Foreign capital inflows have also begun ‌to ⁠return to the government bond market, particularly in the short and medium-term tenors," Denny said.

The central bank will continue to monitor developments in global and domestic ​financial markets while ​maintaining the ⁠attractiveness of domestic financial instruments to support foreign capital inflows, he added.

BI will ​also continue to take action to ​stabilise the ⁠rupiah through "consistent and measured NDF intervention in the offshore, onshore and spot markets," the spokesperson said.

The rupiah ⁠strengthened ​by 0.25% to 17,930 a dollar ​in the opening session on Friday.

($1 = 17,975 rupiah)

Reporting by Stefanno Sulaiman, ​Ananda Teresia; Editing by John Mair and David Stanway

Source: Reuters


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