Skip to main content
Advertisement
Advertisement

Business

Danantara Indonesia will honour commodity export contracts, but will review prices

Danantara Indonesia will honour commodity export contracts, but will review prices

FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows traffic during evening rush hours at the business district in Jakarta, Indonesia, February 3, 2026. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan/File Photo

21 May 2026 05:25PM

JAKARTA, May 21 : Indonesian sovereign wealth fund Danantara will honour existing export contracts but will review them to make sure prices are not below market levels, its chief executive said on Thursday as the fund prepared to take control of the country's top commodity shipments.

A unit of the fund will become the sole exporter of palm oil, coal and ferroalloys from as early as September, President Prabowo Subianto announced on Wednesday, as his government sought tighter control over tax revenues and foreign exchange earnings from commodities.

Danantara CEO Rosan Roeslani said that when the sovereign wealth fund has visibility on pricing, it may renegotiate prices that were set below global benchmarks.

"We will respect all existing contracts. But what we see is that even though they are long-term contracts, the pricing is not determined at that time, but when the contract is running. Later, if we see a contract below prices at world market index, of course we will review it," Rosan told reporters.

CNA Games
Show More
Show Less

"If we see an indication of under-invoicing, of course we will re-evaluate such a contract," he said.

There is a three-month transition period from June 1, which could be extended to six months, during which exporters must report the volume, value and price points of their goods to the unit, Danantara Sumber Daya Indonesia.

Indonesia is the world's biggest exporter of palm oil, thermal coal and nickel, and last year its exports of the three commodities amounted to $65 billion.

S&P, MOODY'S WARN OF RISKS 

Prabowo's plan aims to tackle concerns about under-invoicing and how exporters account for transfer pricing, but it has unsettled financial markets this week.

On Thursday, Jakarta's main stock index fell to its lowest level in more than a year, while the rupiah currency slid 0.4 per cent to trade near a record low set on Wednesday.

Rating agency S&P Global Ratings warned that the plan could hit Indonesia's exports, squeezing government revenues and the country's balance of payments.

"These factors create greater downside uncertainty to our ratings on Indonesia," it said in a statement, adding that investment could be affected if the changes lowered business confidence and investment sentiment.

S&P is the only major rating agency that has yet to announce its annual review of Indonesia. The other two, Moody's and Fitch, have both cut their credit rating outlook to negative from stable this year.

Moody's said while the export plans could support foreign exchange inflows, they also raised the risk of market distortions and could weigh on investor sentiment. 

INDUSTRY WANTS TO SEE DETAILS

Authorities are due to brief companies and business groups about the new export mechanism later on Thursday and implementing regulations would soon be issued by the trade ministry, Trade Minister Budi Santoso said.

Eddy Martono, chairman of palm oil companies' association GAPKI, said his industry has a lot of questions, such as what happens when a buyer requests certain specifications for a shipment.

"Exporters usually already have their own markets. We must ensure that we do not lose these markets due to poor management," he said.

The Indonesian Coal Mining Association was concerned about long-term contracts, specifications of coal quality, financing and other obligations, the group's executive director Gita Mahyarani said.

The Indonesian Nickel Industry Forum (FINI) said it was awaiting the regulation documents and further explanation before making its impact assessment.

Source: Reuters
Advertisement

Also worth reading

Advertisement