Early 2026 sees Indonesia's inflation persisting around 3% due to seasonal food price spikes. The US-Venezuela geopolitical conflict unexpectedly triggers positive global stock market responses without hiking oil prices. However, the trade balance surplus faces shrinking threats due to pressure on key commodity exports.
Indonesia's annual inflation breached 2.92% in December 2025 due to surging Christmas and New Year demand driving up volatile food prices. Bank Permata Chief Economist, Josua Pardede, projects inflation to persist around the 3% range in early 2026, driven by supply disruptions from extreme weather and natural disasters in several regions. Although seasonal holiday effects will subside, prices will not immediately drop sharply as the price baseline was already established at a high level by the end of last year.
This domestic economic challenge regarding food prices coincides with global geopolitical dynamics showing a surprising anomaly.
The arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro by the United States triggered an unexpected market reaction as stock indices actually moved upward, a phenomenon Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa deemed "weird but positive". Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto ensured domestic fuel prices remain safe as global oil prices stay stable below US$ 63 per barrel, given the abundant global supply. Analysts assess this conflict will not shake energy prices because Venezuela's oil production contribution is currently relatively small due to years of economic sanctions.
Amidst the calmness of global oil prices, Indonesia's international trade performance faces serious challenges on the export side.
The trade balance surplus is predicted to be under pressure throughout 2026 due to weakening export performance of flagship commodities such as gold and coal. Bank Danamon Economist, Hosianna Evalita, highlighted that the implementation of export duties and palm oil production disruptions due to floods in Sumatra are the main triggers for the decline in overseas shipment volumes. Conversely, imports of capital goods and electric vehicles have surged sharply in line with manufacturing activity and strengthening domestic demand ahead of incentive deadlines.
These dynamics demand high vigilance for retail business players who must face the potential decline in public purchasing power due to persistent food inflation. On the other hand, capital market investors can breathe a sigh of relief seeing conducive global sentiments, but commodity exporters must implement strict efficiencies facing export duty regulations and declining demand from major trading partners like China.
Global and domestic markets are seeking a new equilibrium where geopolitical risks are no longer the sole determinant of economic direction, but rather supply fundamentals and government regulations now hold the main control over market stability.