Iran-Israel Conflict Has No Impact on Investment Inflows to Indonesia, Says Investment Minister
JAKARTA — Investment and Downstream Industries Minister/Head of the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) Rosan P. Roeslani has said the Iran-Israel military conflict has not affected investment inflows into Indonesia. Rosan assured that investor appetite for channelling capital into Indonesia remains high, particularly for foreign direct investment (FDI).
"Looking at the appetite of investors, it remains the same — still high. Because if we look at the nature of our investors, especially FDI," Rosan said at the BKPM office in Jakarta on Tuesday (24/6/2025).
"They are more concentrated in Asian countries, such as Singapore, then China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Japan and Korea, so their commitment remains the same. Still high," he emphasised.
He confirmed that the impact of the Iran-Israel war has not yet been felt on investment. Furthermore, Rosan noted that investment realisation figures for the first six months of 2025 have continued to develop positively.
"We can see that up to six months, it has been very, very good. Very, very positive. For us, there appears to be no significant impact. Everything is fine. Running well," he stressed.
The Iran-Israel conflict is still ongoing. In addition to both nations, the United States has also been involved in the situation.
Recently, US President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire between Iran and Israel after 12 days of warfare. "Assuming everything goes as it should, which it certainly will, I want to congratulate both countries, Israel and Iran, for having the stamina, courage, and intelligence to end what should be called the '12-DAY WAR'," Trump wrote on his official Truth Social account, as cited by Reuters on Tuesday.
Israel has not yet openly confirmed that it has accepted Trump's ceasefire. Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi denied claims that Tehran had agreed to a ceasefire deal. However, Iran signalled its readiness to halt military tensions.
Araghchi's statement came after President Donald Trump told NBC News in an exclusive telephone interview that the Israel-Iran ceasefire would last forever. "To this point, there is no 'deal' regarding a ceasefire or cessation of military operations," Araghchi said in a post on X.
He added that if Israel ceased its aggression by 4am Tehran time at the latest, Iran had no intention of pursuing further military action.
"Looking at the appetite of investors, it remains the same — still high. Because if we look at the nature of our investors, especially FDI," Rosan said at the BKPM office in Jakarta on Tuesday (24/6/2025).
"They are more concentrated in Asian countries, such as Singapore, then China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Japan and Korea, so their commitment remains the same. Still high," he emphasised.
He confirmed that the impact of the Iran-Israel war has not yet been felt on investment. Furthermore, Rosan noted that investment realisation figures for the first six months of 2025 have continued to develop positively.
"We can see that up to six months, it has been very, very good. Very, very positive. For us, there appears to be no significant impact. Everything is fine. Running well," he stressed.
The Iran-Israel conflict is still ongoing. In addition to both nations, the United States has also been involved in the situation.
Recently, US President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire between Iran and Israel after 12 days of warfare. "Assuming everything goes as it should, which it certainly will, I want to congratulate both countries, Israel and Iran, for having the stamina, courage, and intelligence to end what should be called the '12-DAY WAR'," Trump wrote on his official Truth Social account, as cited by Reuters on Tuesday.
Israel has not yet openly confirmed that it has accepted Trump's ceasefire. Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi denied claims that Tehran had agreed to a ceasefire deal. However, Iran signalled its readiness to halt military tensions.
Araghchi's statement came after President Donald Trump told NBC News in an exclusive telephone interview that the Israel-Iran ceasefire would last forever. "To this point, there is no 'deal' regarding a ceasefire or cessation of military operations," Araghchi said in a post on X.
He added that if Israel ceased its aggression by 4am Tehran time at the latest, Iran had no intention of pursuing further military action.