At the same time, global bond markets were experiencing a major selloff. Investors demanded higher yields as rising energy prices fueled concerns about persistent inflation and potential central‑bank tightening.
U.S. Treasury yields climbed sharply during this period, with the benchmark 10‑year yield reaching about 4.63%, while shorter‑term and long‑term yields also moved to multi‑month or multi‑year highs.
Higher U.S. yields have two important effects:
As investors shifted toward safer dollar‑denominated assets, the U.S. dollar strengthened globally—putting downward pressure on emerging‑market currencies including the rupiah.
These global forces converged at the same time:
The result was a sharp depreciation of the rupiah. The currency slid past 17,500 per U.S. dollar and later weakened beyond 17,700, the weakest level on record.
Currency weakness also triggered intervention concerns and speculation about policy responses from Bank Indonesia as authorities tried to stabilize the exchange rate and financial markets.
The rupiah’s decline was part of a broader regional trend. As oil prices surged and global yields climbed, other Asian currencies also weakened against the dollar.
For example, the Indian rupee also hit record lows as high energy prices and rising global yields reduced risk appetite and worsened the outlook for large oil‑importing economies.
Currencies across emerging Asia—including the Philippine peso—faced similar pressure as investors shifted portfolios toward the United States and away from emerging markets.
The currency shock coincided with a broader downturn in bond markets worldwide. Rising inflation expectations pushed bond prices lower and yields higher from the United States to Asia.
Analysts described the move as a synchronized bond rout, with sovereign bonds from major economies falling as investors priced in tighter monetary policy and prolonged inflation driven partly by higher energy costs.
Because many emerging economies depend on foreign investment to finance government debt, rising global yields tend to amplify financial stress in those markets.
The shift toward safe‑haven assets also weighed on global equities and emerging‑market risk assets.
Asian stock markets broadly weakened as investors reduced exposure to regions sensitive to higher oil prices and global growth risks. Energy‑dependent economies were particularly vulnerable.
South Korea’s Kospi index, for example, experienced sharp volatility during periods of escalating Middle East tensions. Concerns about higher fuel costs and disruptions to shipping routes weighed heavily on sectors such as transportation and manufacturing, contributing to steep market declines at times.
The rupiah’s plunge illustrates how geopolitical shocks can quickly ripple through the global financial system.
The sequence unfolded roughly like this:
For economies like Indonesia that rely on imported energy and foreign capital, this combination can produce rapid currency depreciation and financial‑market volatility.
While such episodes often stabilize once energy prices and bond yields settle, they highlight how closely emerging‑market currencies remain tied to global interest rates, commodity prices, and geopolitical risk.
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