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Indonesia
Summary
Moody’s Baa3 / S&P BB+ / Fitch BBB-1
Economy: Agriculture 14%, Industry 41%, Services 45%
Indonesia’s economy is the largest in Southeast Asia, and the country has strong growth potential
given its size and abundant natural resources. Years of high growth have led to a tripling of GDP
in US dollar terms during the past decade. Public finances are solid, with small fiscal deficits, low
public debt levels, and manageable financing needs. Indonesia’s main weakness is the quality of
current account deficit financing, which has contributed to an increase in external debt stock.
However, a more flexible exchange rate has strengthened the balance of payments. The 2014 elections, which proceeded peacefully and fairly, consolidated political stability, although Indonesian
institutions remain weak, with endemic corruption. Relative to other large emerging markets countries such as Brazil and Turkey, Indonesia’s political conditions are currently much more stable,
and President Joko Widodo is gradually moving forward with important economic reforms.
Economic Indicators
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016F
2017F
Population (Millions)
244.5
248.0
251.5
255.1
258.1
258.1
GDP per Capita (USD)
3,754
3,680
3,524
3,376
3,557
3,578
Nominal GDP (USD Billions)
917.7
912.4
886.3
861.1
918.2
923.4
Real GDP (%)
6.3
5.8
5.3
4.8
5.0
5.3
Year-End CPI (%)
3.7
8.1
8.4
3.4
3.6
4.2
Fiscal Balance (% of GDP)
-1.7
-2.2
-2.2
-2.5
-2.7
-2.6
Interest (% of Revenues)
6.8
6.9
7.6
8.2
8.5
8.5
FC Debt/Public Debt (%)
56.0
53.7
54.2
54.6
54.1
53.9
Government Debt (% of GDP)
22.6
23.3
25.8
29.2
29.4
29.7
145.8
155.3
176.8
224.0
200.0
199.3
Current Account (% of GDP)
-2.7
-3.2
-3.0
-2.1
-2.0
-2.2
FDI (% of GDP)
1.5
1.3
1.7
1.1
1.3
1.4
External Debt (% of GDP)
27.5
29.2
33.0
36.1
35.5
35.8
Foreign Reserves/External Debt (%)
44.7
37.3
36.1
32.2
33.0
34.2
Foreign Reserves (Mo. of imports)
6.4
5.6
6.3
7.3
8.2
8.2
12.3
10.9
11.9
11.6
11.7
12.2
Government Debt (% of Revenue)
Foreign Reserves (% of GDP)
As of November 2016
Forecasted or estimated results do not represent a promise or guarantee of future results and are subject
to change.
Source: IMF, Haver Analytics, Indonesian Central Bank, Lazard
51
Lazard Emerging Markets Debt
Rating History
Below is a history of the country’s foreign and local currency ratings by the major agencies
dating back to 2000. We have also included a chart of the country’s hard currency external
debt spread and the JP Morgan EMBI Global Diversified Index spread for comparison.
Rating History
Hard Currency
Local Currency
BBB+/BBB
BBB
BBB-
BBB-/BB+
BB+
BB/BB-
BB
BB-
B+/B
B+
B-/CCC+
B-
CCC/CCCCC
B
2000
2008
Moody’s
2016
S&P
CCC+
2000
2008
Moody’s
Fitch
2016
S&P
Fitch
As of December 2016
Performance represents past performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.
Source: Fitch, Moody’s, Standard and Poor’s, Bloomberg
Bond Spreads
Local Yield
1200
24
1000
800
20
600
16
400
12
200
8
0
2008
2010
Indonesia
2012
EMBIGD
2014
2016
4
2008
2010
Indonesia
2012
2014
2016
GBI-EM Global Div
As of December 2016
Performance represents past performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.
Source: JP Morgan
52
Indonesia
Strengths
Large, Diversified, and Resilient Economy
Indonesia maintains promising growth prospects after years of high growth. The country is
Southeast Asia’s largest and most closed economy; trade equals 45% of GDP, a factor that
makes it less sensitive to global conditions. Growth has averaged 5.5% over the past 15 years,
both before and after the 2008–2009 global financial crisis, with some of the lowest volatility
in emerging markets. It should continue posting similar growth in the years to come with
the International Monetary Fund expecting growth to average 5.6% from 2017 to 2020.
Domestic consumption from a large population and favorable demographics will continue
to be key drivers of growth. Other big drivers include investment and a diversified export
base. In the medium to long term, high investment and low GDP per capita should continue
supporting Indonesia’s growth. A savings rate higher than 30% of GDP, versus 20% on average for emerging markets, has enabled the country to respond to shocks and grow without
generating excessive imbalances. The resilience of Indonesia’s economy was evident during
the global financial crisis-Indonesia was the only economy in the G20 that recorded positive growth in 2009 at 4.5%2-as well as during the more recent bout of emerging markets
growth deceleration.
Solid Public Finances and Low Debt Levels
Indonesia’s public finances are another key strength and have improved significantly over the
past decade. This gives the country an enviable fiscal position despite the recent widening of
fiscal deficits. Strong economic growth and low fiscal deficits resulted in a dramatic decline
in the public debt burden until 2012, and debt levels have registered only a mild increase
since. As a share of GDP, public debt is expected to come in at around 29% of GDP in 2016,
about one-fourth of the post-Asian crisis ratio of 100% in 2000.3 The government also made
major improvements in the quality of expenditures by reducing subsidies, which peaked at
close to 6% of GDP in 2008, giving more room to increase infrastructure spending that is
urgently needed. On the revenue side, the government surprised the market on the upside
with a tax-amnesty program that started in mid-July 2016 and ends in March 2017, with a
goal to raise Indonesian rupiah (IDR) 165 trillion. A major anchor for fiscal responsibility is a
constitutional limit on the fiscal deficit set at 3% of GDP.4 Additionally, investment expenditures typically undershoot targets.
Relative Political Stability
Indonesia is among the most diverse countries in the world, with around 300 different ethnic
groups and languages.5 It is also a young democracy, where the first direct presidential elections occurred in 2004; there was military rule for most of the previous 30 years. There are
still demands for independence in some provinces, where secessionists have been encouraged
by East Timor’s 1999 success in breaking away. Considering these factors, and the presence of militant Islamist groups, the country is remarkably stable politically. Indonesia held
parliamentary elections in April 2016, and a new president was elected in July 2014. Former
Governor of Jakarta, Joko Widodo, affiliated with the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDIP), an opposition group running on an anti-corruption campaign, won. Widodo is making
progress in reforming the economy, for example removing fuel subsidies and increasing the
tax base.
53
Lazard Emerging Markets Debt
Weaknesses
Sharp Deterioration in the External Balance
Indonesia has experienced a large reversal of its current account position since the prefinancial crisis period, with the current account shifting from a 2.4% of GDP surplus at the
end of 2007 to a 3.1% of GDP deficit, which peaked in 2014 and declined to an estimated
2.2% of GDP in 2016. The current account deterioration has been almost entirely driven by
a drop in exports, while imports remained relatively steady. Cyclical factors, namely slowing
global demand and strong import demand, have been key drivers behind the deterioration.
The current account deficit is not high, but financing remains a problem as foreign direct
investment (FDI) is low at less than 1.5% of GDP. A large share of the financing comes from
portfolio inflows, which could reverse quickly, or from external debt, which has increased
substantially in recent years. External debt as a share of GDP is low at around 35%, but as a
share of exports of goods and services, it has reached nearly 200%.
Weak Infrastructure and Corruption
Indonesia has significant infrastructure limitations. It is ranked 81st out of 142 countries in
terms of infrastructure by the World Economic Forum (WEF). The quality of roads, ports,
and electricity supply is low. Public investment is among the lowest in the region at around
3% of GDP, one-third that of Malaysia and India.6 Part of this is due to poor budget execution. Rapid investment growth seen in recent years has been driven by the commodity sector,
but investment in public infrastructure remains poor. Corruption is another major issue in
Indonesia, with the country ranking in the bottom third of most indices and the majority of
Indonesians reporting rampant corruption among police, the judiciary, and political parties.7
Partially due to these factors, as well as a relatively inflexible labor market, Indonesia ranks
poorly in ease of doing business indicators, near the bottom in areas such as starting a business and enforcing contracts.8
Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy
Inflation/Monetary Policy
Bank Indonesia (BI), Indonesia’s Central Bank, has a single mandate: to maintain rupiah
stability. This single objective in practice has two aspects: maintain price stability (the inflation mandate) and contain exchange-rate volatility. BI operates under an inflation-targeting
framework. The inflation target range for 2015–2017 is set at 4.0% ±1%, measured as an
average over the calendar year. The target range will decline to 3.0% ±1% starting in 2018. In
addition to the monetary-policy objectives, BI is also tasked with maintaining financial stability. Policy decisions are carried out by the Board of Governors, consisting of the governor,
senior deputy governor, and four deputy governors. All board members are appointed for
a five-year term and cannot be removed unless they resign or under certain special circumstances (i.e., permanently incapacitated, convicted of a felony, declared bankrupt, absent
for three consecutive months without reasonable cause, etc.). The members of the board of
governors can serve no more than two consecutive terms in the same position.
BI has several tools to implement monetary policy. During 2016, BI switched from the BI
reference rate to the 7-day reverse repurchase (repo) rate as the main policy interest rate. The
7-day reverse repo rate is the rate relevant for open-market operations carried out by Bank
Indonesia. At the same time, BI uses standing liquidity facilities for managing the overnight
interbank market liquidity. They do so by setting the deposit and lending rates, thus defining
54
Indonesia
the interest-rate corridor around the policy rate. Usually the lending rate defines the top of
the corridor, and the deposit rate defines the bottom of the corridor. When evaluating the
monetary policy stance, it is useful to take into account that a 1% real policy rate is considered neutral by the BI board.
BI’s track record in meeting its inflation target has been mixed, but its commitment to the
target has been strong. Since 2010, headline inflation has exceeded the target by 0.9% on
average, i.e., at the upper end of the tolerance band. But this has not been consistent over
time—in 2010 through early 2013, inflation was oscillating symmetrically around the central
target, but in the aftermath of the taper tantrum, starting in May 2013 and through 2015,
inflation exceeded the upper bound of the target, in large part due to pass-through from
currency depreciation. Between May 2013 and December 2015, the rupiah depreciated by
a cumulative 40%. Additional drivers of inflation volatility have been the food and energy/
utility components. However, the government’s decision in late 2014 to remove subsidies
on fuel in order to reduce the fiscal burden on has been helping reduce inflation volatility
because fuel prices are no longer adjusted in abrupt one-off moves, but on an ongoing basis,
in line with global energy prices. BI’s response to the inflationary pressure from sustained
depreciation of the currency was to hike rates 175 basis points in late 2013 and maintain this
tight policy stance until late 2015. In this context, despite challenges in achieving the inflation target over 2013–2015 due to external shocks, BI demonstrated a clear commitment to
the inflation-targeting regime.
During 2016, BI was able to meet the inflation target and ease monetary policy. At the time
of writing, headline inflation stands at 3.3% and core at 3.1%, both at the lower end of
the inflation target range. The biggest driver for the drop in inflation was, once again, the
currency. After the cumulative 40% depreciation in 2013–2015, the currency appreciated
around 5.5% in nominal terms during 2016. This reversal from roughly 9% depreciation
in 2015 to 5.5% appreciation in 2016 has reversed the exchange-rate pass-through as the
chief driver of inflationary pressure. In addition, lack of demand-side inflationary pressure as
growth remains close to trend and the reduced pressure from regulated prices have helped.
In this context, BI was able to ease monetary policy by 125 basis points, unwinding the tight
stance taken when the currency was under pressure.
Looking ahead to 2017, we expect limited inflationary pressures and continued monetarypolicy easing. We expect inflation to remain subdued, at close to 3.5%–4.0% in 2017, with
downside risks dominating. While growth is picking up, we do not expect demand-side inflationary pressure, as we expect the output gap to remain close to neutral. Meanwhile, the last
stage of the program to remove energy subsidies, combined with the expectation of a modest
rise in global energy prices, should provide slight upside to the currently low inflation. Given
this benign backdrop for inflation we expect BI to cut rates to 4.5%. The main risk to this
view is an upside inflation surprise, which would halt or reverse BI easing.
55
Lazard Emerging Markets Debt
Inflation
USD/IDR
14
14000
12
13000
10
12000
8
11000
6
10000
4
9000
2
8000
0
2000
2008
Inflation
2016
7000
2000
2008
2016
Reference Rate
As of December 2016
Source: Bloomberg
Exchange Rate Policy
The IDR has traded in a managed floating exchange-rate regime since 1999. BI intervenes in
the spot market and through derivatives, aiming to tame volatility and to prevent excessive
real effective exchange-rate appreciation. Indonesia has limited foreign exchange controls, and
the IDR is a nondeliverable currency, traded on a nondeliverable forward basis offshore.
The IDR is best understood in the context of balance-of-payments dynamics. After peaking
at a 2.8% of GDP surplus in 2006, Indonesia’s current account balance saw a major reversal,
sliding to a deficit of 3.9% of GDP in the third quarter of 2013. The reversal was driven by
the trade balance, as both the non-oil and gas balance and the oil and gas balance shifted
from surplus to deficit positions. Falling export prices, particularly for Indonesia’s key export
commodities (coal, oil and gas, palm oil, rubber, and copper), as well as declining volume
growth as Chinese demand weakened, have hurt the country’s export performance and pose
challenges for its external and exchange-rate outlook. Meanwhile, strong domestic demand,
thanks to accommodative fiscal, monetary, and credit policies, kept import demand strong in
the post-crisis period and up to 2013. With FDI averaging 1.2%–1.5% of GDP since 2010,
the large current account deficit in 2013 was not sustainable. This was exposed during the
taper tantrum in mid-2013 and the subsequent decline of oil and gas prices in 2014–2015. As
a result of those external shocks, the IDR depreciated by a cumulative 40% in the 2013–2015
period, and the economy slowed, weakening import demand. This combination of economic
slowdown and currency depreciation helped steadily reverse Indonesia’s current account deterioration, with the deficit stabilizing at around -1.9% to -2.1% of GDP since the first quarter
of 2015. Thus, Indonesia’s basic balance—the part of the current account shortfall not covered
by FDI—is around -0.8% of GDP. While currently this is comfortably covered by portfolio
and other investments, Indonesia remains vulnerable to an external funding shock.
56
Indonesia
Looking ahead to 2017, we expect IDR stability with the risk of a mild appreciation. This
outlook is driven by three factors: accommodative global financial conditions, continued
recovery in commodity prices (especially energy), and portfolio investment inflows as investors take advantage of ongoing monetary policy easing and the growth recovery.
REER
150
125
100
75
50
2000
2008
2016
REER
Median since Dec 2000
Median last 5 yrs
Median last 10 yrs
As of December 2016
Source: JP Morgan, Lazard
57
Lazard Emerging Markets Debt
Country Background
Size
1,904,569 KM2 (15th)
Capital
Jakarta
Population
258.3 Million
Ethnic Groups
Javanese 40%, Sundanese 16%, Malay 4%, Batak 4%,
Madurese 3%
Religion
Muslim 87%, Christian 7%, Catholic 3%, Hindu 2%, Other 3%
Median Age
29.9 Years
Literacy Rate
93.9%
Independence
August 1945
Political System
Republic
Presidents
Joko Widodo (PDI-P)
Legislative Elections
2019
Legislative Branch
560 Seats
Economy
Agriculture 14.0%, Industry 41.3%, Service 44.7%
Labor Force
Agriculture 38.9%, Services 13.2%, Industry 47.9%
Merchandise Exports
Palm Oil, Oil and Gas, Ores and Slags, Electrical Appliances,
Plywood, Textiles, Rubber
Export Partners
Japan 12%, United States 10.8%, China 10%, Singapore
8.4%, India 7.8%, Korea 5.1%, Malaysia 5.1%
Currency
Rupiah (IDR)
As of November 2016
Source: CIA
58
Indonesia
Country Timeline
Suharto comes to power
1965
Failed coup: In the aftermath, hundreds of thousands of suspected Communists are killed in a
purge of leftists which descends into vigilantism.
1966
Sukarno hands over emergency powers to General Suharto, who becomes president in
March 1967.
1969
West Papua formally incorporated into Indonesia, becoming Irian Jaya Province.
1975
Portugal grants East Timor independence.
1976
Indonesia invades East Timor and incorporates it as a province.
1997
Asian economic crisis: Indonesian rupiah plummets in value.
1998
Protests and rioting topple Suharto; B J Habibie becomes president.
East Timor independence vote
1999
Ethnic violence breaks out in Maluku. Free elections are held in Indonesia. East Timor votes
for independence in UN-sponsored referendum, after which anti-independence militia go on
the rampage. East Timor comes under UN administration. Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur)
becomes president.
2000
Two financial scandals dog the Wahid administration: Buloggate (embezzled funds from the
state logistics agency), and Bruneigate (missing humanitarian aid funds from the Sultan of
Brunei). The corruption case against former President Suharto collapses. Irian Jaya separatists become more vocal in demanding a referendum.
2001
Ethnic violence in Kalimantan as indigenous Dayaks force out Madurese transmigrants. Mass
political demonstrations by Wahid's supporters and opponents. IMF stops further loans citing
lack of progress in tackling corruption.
Megawati sworn in
2001
July—Parliament dismisses President Wahid over allegations of corruption and incompetence. Vice President Megawati Sukarnoputri is sworn in as his replacement, even as Wahid
refuses to leave the presidential palace. Irian Jaya province granted greater autonomy by
Jakarta, allowed to adopt locally-preferred name of Papua.
2002
May—East Timor becomes independent.
2002
August—Constitutional changes are seen as a step towards democracy. For the first time,
voters will be able to elect a president and vice president.
Bali attacks
2002
October—Bomb attack on the Kuta Beach nightclub district on Bali kills 202 people, most of
them tourists.Muslim Cleric Abu Bakar Ba'asyir is arrested shortly after the bombings. He is
accused of plotting to overthrow the government as the alleged spiritual leader of Jemaah
Islamiah (JI), the group thought to be behind the Bali bombing.
2002
December—Government and separatist Free Aceh Movement (Gam) sign peace deal in
Geneva, aimed at ending 26 years of violence. The accord provides for autonomy and free
elections in the Muslim oil-rich province of Aceh; in return the Gam must disarm.
2003
May—Peace talks between government and Gam separatists break down; government
mounts military offensive against Gam rebels. Martial law is imposed.
2003
August—Car bomb explodes outside the Marriott Hotel in Jakarta, killing 14 people.
2003
August-October—Three Bali bombing suspects are found guilty and sentenced to death for
their roles in the 2002 attacks. A fourth suspect is given life imprisonment. Abu Bakar Ba'asyir
is cleared of treason but jailed for subversion and immigration offences. The subversion
charge is later overturned.
2004
April—Parliamentary and local elections: Golkar party of former President Suharto wins greatest share of vote, with Megawati Sukarnoputri's PDI-P coming second.
59
Lazard Emerging Markets Debt
2004
July—First-ever direct presidential elections; first round narrows field to Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono and incumbent Megawati Sukarnoputri.
2004
September—Car bomb attack outside Australian embassy in Jakarta kills nine, injures more
than 180.Former general Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono wins second round of presidential elections, unseating incumbent Megawati Sukarnoputri.
2004
November—End of two-year process under which 18 people were tried by Indonesian court
for human rights abuses in East Timor during 1999 crisis. Only one conviction - that of militia
leader Eurico Guterres - is left standing.
Tsunami; Aceh deal
2004
December—More than 220,000 people are dead or missing in Indonesia alone after a powerful undersea earthquake off Sumatra generates massive tidal waves. The waves devastate
Indian Ocean communities as far afield as Thailand, India, Sri Lanka and Somalia.
2005
March—Court finds Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Ba'asyir guilty of conspiracy over 2002 Bali
bombings, sentences him to two-and-a-half years in jail. He is freed in June 2006. A powerful
earthquake off Sumatra kills at least 1,000 people, many of them on the island of Nias. The
quake triggers tsunami alerts around the Indian Ocean.
2005
August—Government and Free Aceh Movement separatists sign a peace deal providing for
rebel disarmament and the withdrawal of government soldiers from the province. Rebels
begin handing in weapons in September; government completes troop pull-out in December.
2005
September—Airliner crashes on take-off from Sumatran city of Medan, killing more than 100
passengers and around 50 people on the ground.
2005
October—Three suicide bombings on the resort island of Bali kill 23 people, including the
bombers
2006
January—East Timorese report accuses Indonesia of widespread atrocities during its 24-year
occupation, holding it responsible for the deaths of more than 100,000 people.
2006
February-March—Deadly protests at a major US-owned gold and copper mine in Papua province follow attempts to remove illegal prospectors from the site.
2006
May—A powerful earthquake kills thousands of people on Java.
2006
July—A tsunami, triggered by a large undersea earthquake, kills more than 500 people on Java.
Aceh elections
2006
December—First direct elections held in Aceh province, consolidating the August 2005
peace accord. Former separatist rebel leader Irwandi Yusuf elected governor.
2007
June—Police capture the alleged head of the militant group Jemaah Islamiah (JI), Zarkasih,
and the leader of the group's military wing, Abu Dujana.
2007
December—Alleged JI leader Zarkasih goes on trial in Jakarta.
2008
January—Former President Suharto dies.
2008
July—Final report by joint Indonesian-East Timorese Truth Commission blames Indonesia for
the human rights violations in the run-up to East Timor's independence in 1999 and urges it to
apologise. President Yudhoyono expresses "deep regret" but stops short of an apology.
2008
November—Three Islamic militants convicted of carrying out the 2002 Bali bombings are executed.
2009
July—President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono wins re-election.Twin suicide bomb attacks on
the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta kill nine people and injure scores of others.
Pressure mounts on militants
60
2009
September—Police shoot dead Indonesia's most-wanted Islamist militant Noordin Mohammad
Top, thought to be responsible for a series of deadly attacks across the archipelago.
2010
February-March—Several suspected militants are arrested in series of raids on alleged training camps of groups thought to be linked to Jemaah Islamiah (JI) in Aceh province. Fourteen
men are charged with plotting to launch terrorist attacks.
2010
March—Police shoot dead Dulmatin - an alleged leading member of JI and the last main
suspect in the 2002 Bali bombings still at large - during a raid on a Jakarta internet cafe.
Indonesia
2010
October—Indonesia admits that men seen torturing Papuan villagers in a video are members
of the military.President Yudhoyono calls off a state visit to the Netherlands because of a
threatened bid by separatists to have him arrested.
2010
November—US President Barack Obama visits, hailing Indonesia as an example of how a
developing nation can embrace democracy and diversity.
2011
February—Two churches are set alight in central Java during a protest by hundreds of
Muslims about blasphemy.Three members of the Ahmadiyah sect, a minority Muslim group,
are bludgeoned to death in a mob attack in West Java.
2011
June—Radical cleric Abu Bakar Ba'asyir gets 15-year jail sentence for backing an Islamist
militant training camp.
2011
December—Pay deal ends acrimonious three-month strike by 8,000 workers at copper
and gold mine owned by US company Freeport-McMoran in the restive eastern province of
Papua. Dutch government apologises for massacre of at least 150 people in the village of
Rawagede, on the island of Java, in 1947, during Indonesia's war of independence.
2012
March—Court sentences Islamist militant Pepi Fernando to 18 years in prison for a parcelbombing campaign targeting Muslim leaders and police.
2012
June—Jakarta court sentences bombmaker Umar Patek to 20 years in prison for his role in
the 2002 Bali attacks. He was extradited from Pakistan in 2011. The sentencing brings to an
end the 10-year investigation into the bombings.
2013
February—Eight soldiers are shot dead in two separate attacks by armed men in Papua province.
2013
June—Parliament approves a major petrol and diesel price hike to cut the ballooning fuel subsidy, sparking violent protests.
2013
September—Via its ambassador in Jakarta, the Netherlands publicly apologises for summary
executions carried out by the Dutch army in the 1940s.
2013
November—Major diplomatic row with Australia over allegations that Australia spied on the
president.
2014
April—Opposition Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) comes out ahead in parliamentary election, but wins fewer votes than expected.
2014
July—Joko Widodo is declared the winner in the presidential election.
2015
January—Brazil and the Netherlands recall their ambassadors from Indonesia after the execution by firing squad of two of their citizens for drug trafficking.
2015
April—Australia recalls ambassador after Indonesia executes two Australian drug convicts, in
a group also including three Nigerians, an Indonesian, a Brazilian and a Ghanaian.
2015
May—Indonesia and Malaysia agree to rescue and provide temporary shelter to Rohingya
migrants fleeng Myanmar by boat, after weeks of mounting humanitarian crisis.
2016
January—Islamic State media claim responsibility for coordinated attacks near popular shopping centre in central Jakarta.
2016
October—Parliament approves harsher penalties including chemical castration, for child sex
offenders.
2016
November—Indonesia agrees to help investigate the disappearance of three Dutch warships
that were sunk in sunk in the Second World War.
2016
December—The Netherlands agrees to launch an inquiry into the conclusion of its colonial
rule in Indonesia in the 1940s. Dutch troops are suspected of having killed tens of thousands
of people during the war of independence.
2016
December—Deadly earthquake strikes off Indonesia’s Aceh province.
Source: BBC
61
Lazard Emerging Markets Debt
Notes
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
62
As of December 2016.
As of December 2013, Source: Haver, IMF.
As of October 2016, Source: Haver, IMF.
“Indonesia: Staff Report for the 2013 Article IV Consultation,” IMF Country Report No. 13/362, December
2013, http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2013/cr13362.pdf.
“CIA World Factbook: Indonesia,” CIA, accessed on November 24, 2015, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/id.html.
As of October 2016, Source: Haver.
“2014 Corruption Perceptions Index,” Transparency.Org, accessed on November 25, 2015, http://www.
transparency.org/cpi2014/results
“Economy Rankings,” Doing Business, accessed on November 24, 2016, http://www.doingbusiness.org/
rankings.
Important Information
Published on 24 February 2017.
Information and opinions presented have been obtained or derived from sources believed by Lazard to be
reliable. Lazard makes no representation as to their accuracy or completeness. All opinions expressed herein
are as of the published date and are subject to change.
Forecasted or estimated results do not represent a promise or guarantee of future results and are subject
to change.
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until maturity, you may experience a gain or loss when you sell. Bonds also carry the risk of default, which is
the risk that the issuer is unable to make further income and principal payments. Other risks, including inflation risk, call risk, and pre-payment risk, also apply. High yield securities (also referred to as “junk bonds”)
inherently have a higher degree of market risk, default risk, and credit risk.
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in a loss. Securities in certain non-domestic countries may be less liquid, more volatile, and less subject to
governmental supervision than in one’s home market. The values of these securities may be affected by
changes in currency rates, application of a country’s specific tax laws, changes in government administration, and economic and monetary policy. Emerging markets securities carry special risks, such as less
developed or less efficient trading markets, a lack of company information, and differing auditing and legal
standards. The securities markets of emerging markets countries can be extremely volatile; performance
can also be influenced by political, social, and economic factors affecting companies in these countries.
This material is provided by Lazard Asset Management LLC or its affiliates (“Lazard”). There is no guarantee
that any projection, forecast, or opinion in this material will be realized. Past performance does not guarantee future results. This document is for informational purposes only and does not constitute an investment
agreement or investment advice. References to specific strategies or securities are provided solely in
the context of this document and are not to be considered recommendations by Lazard. Investments in
securities and derivatives involve risk, will fluctuate in price, and may result in losses. Certain securities
and derivatives in Lazard’s investment strategies, and alternative strategies in particular, can include high
degrees of risk and volatility, when compared to other securities or strategies. Similarly, certain securities
in Lazard’s investment portfolios may trade in less liquid or efficient markets, which can affect
investment performance.
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