Indonesian Stocks, Rupiah May Advance on Yudhoyono's Party Lead

By Berni Moestafa

April 13 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesian elections that will strengthen
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's hold on parliament may also
spark gains in stocks and the rupiah, the nation's biggest
investment fund manager said.

PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia and PT Indosat, the nation's two biggest
phone companies, as well as toll-road operators and power stations may
benefit from the government's push for more investments following
the Democrat Party's early lead, PT Schroder Investment Management
Indonesia's Kiekie Boenawan said.

Yudhoyono presided over reforms that led the economy to expand more than
6 percent in the past two years, the fastest since the 1997 Asian
financial crisis, and the polls last week may boost his chances of
re-election in July. Officials had five hours on April 9 to take in
ballots from 171 million registered voters across 17,000 islands in
elections that were peaceful.

"The market will likely respond positively as the political
uncertainty has greatly diminished," Boenawan, whose $1.9 billion
investment fund is the biggest in the country, said in an interview on
April 10. "Government policies in the past five years have done well
to the economy."

Yudhoyono's Democrat Party led the polls with 20.4 percent of the
vote, according to the Indonesian Survey Institute. That's almost
three times its tally in 2004's election and enough for a party to
nominate a presidential candidate without a coalition. The official
results are expected next month.

Stocks Rise

The Jakarta Composite index has gained 8.1 percent this year after a
record 51 percent drop in 2008. Indonesia has drawn the second-highest
equity-fund inflows this year among nine Asian economies tracked by
Bloomberg.

The measure has risen 72 percent since Yudhoyono took office on Oct. 20,
2004, the best-performing benchmark index in Southeast Asia. The MSCI
Asia Pacific Index was little changed, falling 0.03 percent during that
period. Indonesia's markets were closed on April 9 and April 10.

While stocks rallied, the rupiah has fallen 20 percent, the second-worst
performer among 19 currencies in Asia Pacific tracked by Bloomberg.

The country's economic growth may slow to 3 percent in 2009 from 6.1
percent last year, according to the government's forecast in
February. Increased government spending ahead of the elections may have
also masked the full blunt of the global economic crisis, said Karim
Raslan, a lawyer and political consultant who works out of Kuala Lumpur
and Jakarta. Government bureaucracy may also stall any investment plans,
he added.

Kirim email ke