Indonesia’s 2026 State Budget was built on a crude price assumption of USD 70 per barrel. That assumption was already optimistic when the budget passed. When the IRGC declared control of the Strait of Hormuz on 4 March 2026 and Brent closed above USD 100, it became a structural problem.
The arithmetic is precise. Every USD 1 increase in crude above USD 70 adds IDR 10.3 trillion in fuel subsidy costs to the state budget whilst returning only IDR 3.6 trillion in upstream oil revenue – a net drain of IDR 6.7 trillion per dollar.
Susiwijono Moegiarso, Secretary of the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, stated the position plainly at a government forum last month: “For every one dollar increase in ICP, from the expenditure side, we have to add Rp 10.3 trillion due to energy compensation subsidies.
“So our expenditures increase by Rp 10.3 trillion for every one-dollar increase, and then we get Rp 3.6 trillion. So, the deficit is about Rp 6.7 trillion for every one-dollar increase.”
With Brent sustaining above USD 100 through mid-March, the budget faces a net shock of approximately IDR 200 trillion against its original assumptions. That is not a rounding error. It is a fiscal cliff edge the government has chosen to absorb rather than pass through to consumers.
Coordinating Minister Airlangga Hartarto confirmed the position at Menara Batavia in Jakarta on 5 March 2026: “Our budget in the APBN is at USD 70 per barrel of ICP, so we are waiting.”
The government will hold subsidised fuel prices and absorb the shock through the state budget. The decision protects Indonesian households. It transfers the cost directly to the fiscal deficit – in the same quarter that Indonesia is trying to demonstrate governance credibility to MSCI.
One Budget, One Sovereign Fund, One Oil Price: Indonesia’s Three-Front Battle
For CFOs and treasurers with Indonesian balance sheet exposure, the index question is the wrong question. Three compounding crises share one balance sheet – and all reach a decision point in May.
“For every one dollar increase in ICP, from the expenditure side, we have to add Rp 10.3 trillion due to energy compensation subsidies. So our expenditures increase by Rp 10.3 trillion for every one-dollar increase, and then we get Rp 3.6 trillion. So, the deficit is about Rp 6.7 trillion for every one-dollar increase.”
– Susiwijono Moegiarso, Secretary, Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs
3% of GDP deficit ceiling at risk
USD 2-4 B base case selling pressure
Operational exposure, not just market risk
Subsidy cost per USD 1 oil increase
Upstream revenue gain per USD 1 increase
GDP deficit ceiling – legal constraint
- Widening deficit under oil pressure pushes the IDR lower – every IDR revenue line loses USD value.
- Every USD-denominated obligation costs more IDR to service.
- Bank Indonesia faces a choice: defend the rupiah (draw reserves) or allow depreciation.
- Neither option is neutral for companies with Indonesian revenue and USD costs.
- Danantara contraction means reduced capacity for infrastructure financing and patient capital.
- Deals structured around Danantara’s participation carry operational exposure, not just market risk.
- SOE counterparty risk has not stabilised – it tracks directly against index weighting decisions.
- CFOs modelling only the MSCI scenario have modelled the wrong question.
The Signal the Deficit Sends
Josua Pardede, Chief Economist at Permata Bank, identified the deeper risk in March 2026: “The bigger danger is not only a wider deficit, but the signal that the fiscal rule is becoming negotiable.”
That signal matters beyond the fiscal mathematics. Indonesia’s 3% of GDP deficit ceiling is a legal constraint – the boundary that separates investment-grade fiscal management from the kind of discretionary spending that rating agencies flag.
Moody’s and Fitch both cut their outlooks on Indonesian sovereign debt to negative in February, citing policy uncertainty and weakening governance, before the Hormuz closure added oil-price pressure to the fiscal position.
A deficit approaching or breaching 3% of GDP, in the same window as an MSCI credibility review, compounds both problems simultaneously.
For CFOs managing Indonesian rupiah exposure, the consequence is direct. A widening deficit under oil-price pressure, combined with sovereign outlook downgrades, pushes the IDR lower. Every IDR-denominated revenue line loses USD value. Every USD-denominated obligation costs more IDR to service.
The Sovereign Fund Sitting on Top of the Index
Indonesia’s sovereign wealth fund Danantara was launched in 2025 as the vehicle for consolidating and deploying state-owned enterprise assets.
Its borrowing capacity – the fund’s ability to raise capital for downstream investment and strategic projects – derives from the valuations of those (State-Owned Enterprise) SOE assets. The largest of them are Bank Mandiri and Telkom Indonesia. Both are MSCI Indonesia constituents.
When MSCI cuts index weightings for Indonesian securities in May, index-tracking funds must reduce their holdings mechanically. That selling pressure compresses the market valuations of every affected constituent. Bank Mandiri and Telkom Indonesia sit directly in that path.
A lower market valuation for either means a smaller asset base for Danantara to borrow against – in the same quarter the sovereign budget is absorbing an oil-price shock and the rupiah is under depreciation pressure.
Danantara’s chief investment officer Pandu Sjahrir told Fortune in April 2026 that the IDX had “improved significantly” since MSCI’s warning. The statement is meant to reassure. What it confirms is that the fund is watching the index closely because the index directly affects its operating capacity.
A sovereign wealth fund monitoring an index provider’s reform assessment is not a normal condition. It is a measure of how deeply the MSCI crisis has penetrated Indonesia’s institutional architecture.
What This Means If You Are Not a Fund Manager
The MSCI deadline and its three scenarios – explained in the cover story The Night A Single MSCI statement Erased USD 120 Billion – are the primary concern of fund managers and equity investors.
For CFOs, treasurers and board members with Indonesian operating exposure, the questions are different.
If the budget deficit approaches 3% of GDP under sustained oil-price pressure, Bank Indonesia faces a choice between defending the rupiah through intervention – drawing down reserves – or allowing depreciation that raises the cost of every USD-denominated import and debt obligation.
Neither option is neutral for a company with Indonesian revenue and USD costs.
If Danantara’s borrowing base contracts as SOE valuations fall, the sovereign fund’s capacity to anchor infrastructure financing, provide patient capital for downstream projects, and act as a stabilising counterparty in large transactions is reduced.
For companies that have structured deals, supply agreements, or financing arrangements that assume Danantara’s participation, that contraction is an operational exposure, not a market one.
The three pressures – index, oil, sovereign fund – do not operate on separate tracks. They share one balance sheet. They all reach a decision point in May. CFOs who have modelled only one of them have modelled the wrong scenario.
References:
- Rising Oil Prices from US-Iran War Could Add Hundreds of Trillions to Indonesia’s Budget – Indonesia Business Post
- Indonesia Stocks Tumble, Rupiah Nears 17,000 on Budget Deficit Worries – The Star / Reuters
- Indonesia Faces a Perfect Storm of Downgrade Fears – Fortune
- MSCI Action in Indonesia Proves Growing Power of Index Providers – ETF Stream
- Indonesia Says Stock Market Reform Drive Completed – Jakarta Post
- IRGC Claims Complete Control of Strait of Hormuz – Al Jazeera
- Indonesia Will Not Raise Subsidised Fuel Prices Despite Global Oil Surge – Antara News



