The better-than-expected tax amnesty flows at the end of the first phase of the program (1 July to 30 September) have reduced the downside risks to growth given that the extent of cuts in expenditure will be smaller. Still, Bank Indonesia is expected to cut the 7-day reverse repo rate by another 25 basis points to 4.75 percent at the October 20 monetary policy meeting to counteract weakness in public spending and ease liquidity tightness in the banking system.
The good progress in the tax amnesty program has helped underpin sentiment even though fund repatriation under the program has been hovering at a low 4-5 percent of total funds declared. Clearly, there has been a boost to investor confidence although the impact on the IDR via actual conversion is modest, ANZ reported.
A firm and stable IDR bodes well for Indonesian government bonds. The reduced risk of a larger budget deficit has helped ease our concerns over bond supply. Indeed, given the healthy funding run-rate (90.0 percent) and a likely positive reception to the retail bond offer, the government may meet its full-year bond issuance target in November.
"We maintain our 2016 fiscal deficit projection at 2.5 percent of GDP. A significant fiscal slippage from the government’s 2.4 percent target is unlikely as we turn more constructive on tax amnesty revenues after the good take-up rate in the first phase," ANZ commented in its latest research note.


Trump Endorses Japan’s Sanae Takaichi Ahead of Crucial Election Amid Market and China Tensions
Why Trump’s new pick for Fed chair hit gold and silver markets – for good reasons
Vietnam’s Trade Surplus With US Jumps as Exports Surge and China Imports Hit Record
Gold and Silver Prices Rebound After Volatile Week Triggered by Fed Nomination
U.S. Stock Futures Edge Higher as Tech Rout Deepens on AI Concerns and Earnings
Bank of England Expected to Hold Interest Rates at 3.75% as Inflation Remains Elevated
Bank of Canada Holds Interest Rate at 2.25% Amid Trade and Global Uncertainty
Oil Prices Slip as U.S.–Iran Talks Ease Supply Disruption Fears 



