Quote Search 
Sponsored By
Futures PricesSearch Tips


 News 
Headlines
   Market news and breaking stories live from Dow Jones Newswires
Market Commentary
   A technical analysis commentary of the major markets, only from INO
Smart Scan
   A premium service, alerting you to changes in the market by web and email.
Extreme Futures / Stocks
   Extreme Markets from all exchanges, updated throughout the trading day.


 Free Report 
Enter your email to receive our top daily market analysis:

 Premium Sites 
Trade Triangle Technology, Advanced Charts, SmartScan, Trading Workshops.

The premier online video learning platform for traders.

Daily Portfolio Scan and Analysis

 Help 
Help Line
About INO
Email Services
Contact Us
Advertise on INO
Affiliates
By JULIA ZAPPEI
Associated Press Writer

Indonesian leader backs $715 million bank bailout

76 days ago
(AP:JAKARTA, Indonesia) Indonesia's newly installed vice president defended a $715 million bank bailout Wednesday, saying it had been vital to protecting the nation's financial system during the global economic crisis.

The capital injection to Bank Century late last year was "the right thing" to do, said Boediono, a former central bank governor who was elected vice president in July. Like many Indonesians, he uses only one name.

Lawmakers this week agreed to launch an inquiry into the bailout after the main audit agency alleged there had been irregularities. The criticism poses an additional headache to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who has recently been confronted by a major corruption scandal in law enforcement.

"We did the right thing, the necessary thing, and the result was good," Boediono told reporters in the capital, Jakarta. "We actually got through the crisis quite well compared to other countries."

Indonesia, suffered financial collapse just over a decade ago during the Asian economic crisis, has weathered the recent turmoil almost unscathed. In the first half of 2009 the economy grew 4.2 percent, boosted by steady domestic consumption, compared to 6.1 percent expansion a year earlier.

Unlike other governments, Indonesia did not need a broad stimulus package to prop up the economy. The local currency, the rupiah, and the stock market have been among the best performing in Asia this year.

Boediono said the bank's rescue avoided the domino effect seen in 1997-1998 when a financial meltdown forced millions into unemployment.

When the world's markets began reeling last year, Indonesia's Parliament approved 1.3 trillion rupiah ($140 million) to save the troubled Bank Century, but the bailout ballooned and the government ended up spending 6.76 trillion rupiah ($715 million).

A report by the Supreme Audit Agency released earlier this week said the decision by the Finance Minister and Boediono, who was the central bank governor at the time, to rescue such a relatively small market player had been based on "subjective judgment."

Boediono said allegations that bailout money had been used to fund Yudhoyono's re-election campaign and that bank shareholders committed fraud needed to be looked into.

"These are things that need to be cleared up and will be cleared up," he said. "I'm very confident that we will get through this."

Yudhoyono has dismissed as "cruel slander" charges from political opponents that bailout funds were channeled to help secure his landslide re-election.

___

AP reporter Irwan Firdaus in Jakarta contributed to this article.


Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


< Back to News Index

Trader's Blog
 
Home - Markets - News - INO TV - MarketClub - Portfolio - Traders Blog - Affiliates - Help

ino.com

Copyright 2010 INO.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Usage Agreement - Privacy Policy