Investment Minister Says Iran-Israel Conflict Has No Impact on Foreign Investment in Indonesia
Jakarta - Minister of Investment and Downstreaming/Head of the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) Rosan Roeslani has spoken about the impact of the Iran-Israel conflict on investment in Indonesia.
Rosan stated that foreign investment flows into Indonesia remain in normal condition. He explained that this is because the majority of foreign investment entering Indonesia originates from the Asian region.
"Looking at the appetite and our investors, it remains the same. Still high. Because if we look at the nature of our investors, especially from foreign investment, it is concentrated more in Asian countries," Rosan explained to reporters at the Ministry of Investment and Downstreaming/BKPM office in Jakarta on Tuesday (24/6/2025).
He explained that foreign investment in Indonesia predominantly comes from Singapore, China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Japan and South Korea. Consequently, Rosan said, foreign investment interest in Indonesia has not been hindered.
"The way I see it, the impact is virtually negligible, at least for us. If we look at it from a foreign investment perspective, we have not seen any impact so far," he explained.
Rosan added that foreign investment flows into Indonesia have remained very positive over the past six months. According to him, global geopolitical turbulence has not significantly affected foreign investment in Indonesia.
"For us, it appears there is no major impact. Everything is fine and running well," he concluded.
Rosan stated that foreign investment flows into Indonesia remain in normal condition. He explained that this is because the majority of foreign investment entering Indonesia originates from the Asian region.
"Looking at the appetite and our investors, it remains the same. Still high. Because if we look at the nature of our investors, especially from foreign investment, it is concentrated more in Asian countries," Rosan explained to reporters at the Ministry of Investment and Downstreaming/BKPM office in Jakarta on Tuesday (24/6/2025).
He explained that foreign investment in Indonesia predominantly comes from Singapore, China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Japan and South Korea. Consequently, Rosan said, foreign investment interest in Indonesia has not been hindered.
"The way I see it, the impact is virtually negligible, at least for us. If we look at it from a foreign investment perspective, we have not seen any impact so far," he explained.
Rosan added that foreign investment flows into Indonesia have remained very positive over the past six months. According to him, global geopolitical turbulence has not significantly affected foreign investment in Indonesia.
"For us, it appears there is no major impact. Everything is fine and running well," he concluded.