Bank of Indonesia published an update on indicators used to monitor rupiah value stability, reporting late-January movements in the exchange rate, domestic and global yields, sovereign risk pricing and foreign capital flows. The rupiah closed at IDR 16,745 per USD on 29 January 2026 and opened at IDR 16,770 per USD on 30 January 2026. The 10-year Indonesian government bond (SBN) yield rose to 6.35% at the 29 January close and to 6.36% on the morning of 30 January, while the US Dollar Index (DXY) weakened to 96.28 and the 10-year US Treasury note yield fell to 4.231%. Indonesia’s 5-year credit default swap (CDS) premium was 75.31 bps on 29 January, up from 73.05 bps on 23 January. Transaction data for 26–29 January showed nonresidents net sold IDR 12.55 trillion, comprising net sales of IDR 12.40 trillion in equities and IDR 2.77 trillion in SBN, partly offset by net purchases of IDR 2.61 trillion in Bank Indonesia Rupiah Securities (SRBI). Year-to-date settlement data through 29 January showed nonresidents net bought IDR 4.84 trillion in equities and IDR 6.18 trillion in SRBI, and net sold IDR 0.10 trillion in SBN. Bank of Indonesia said it will continue strengthening coordination with the government and relevant authorities and optimise its policy mix to support Indonesia’s external resilience.