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Indonesia shifts export agency focus to price monitoring

Bloomberg Markets •
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Indonesia's commodity export agency announced a shift in its mandate, moving from direct trade intervention to pure price monitoring of key raw‑material exports. The change follows criticism of a sweeping natural‑resource policy introduced last month, which sparked concern among exporters and investors. By concentrating on price signals, the agency hopes to calm market nerves without altering trade flows in the Asia‑Pacific region.

Analysts see the pivot as a pragmatic response to pressure from mining firms that feared outright bans or quotas could depress revenues. Monitoring prices rather than dictating sales allows the government to gather data for future policy tweaks while avoiding immediate disruption to export volumes. The approach also signals to foreign buyers that Indonesia will not arbitrarily block shipments for the next quarter.

Investors will watch how the agency reports price trends, as those figures often drive decisions on capital allocation in the sector. A clear, data‑driven stance may preserve Indonesia's reputation as a stable supplier of commodities like coal, nickel and palm oil. The agency's new focus therefore translates into a market‑friendly signal that export flows for global manufacturers will continue uninterrupted.