The Association of Indonesian Automotive Manufacturers (Gaikindo) is considering lowering its annual car-sale target this year as the sharp depreciation of the rupiah against the US dollar is likely to further hurt sales Gaikindo’s chairman Jongkie Sugiarto said in Jakarta on Wednesday that with the sharp drop in the rupiah, new cars would become more expensive as distributors had to adjust prices to the new rupiah-dollar exchange rate. “Even though more manufacturers are boasting high local content, component prices will still surge as a result of more expensive raw material imports because of the rupiah slide,” Jongkie told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.
Jongkie said the industry would remain in “wait-and-see” mode until next month before deciding on any changes to this year’s sales target, while hoping that currency volatility was a temporary issue. “If this goes on for too long, there is the possibility of price hikes.” The Indonesian currency has been under pressure since early this year due to the strengthening of the US dollar against the world’s major currencies. The rupiah, which weakened further to 13,192 per dollar on Wednesday, has lost more than 6 percent of its value so far this year . On separate occasions on Wednesday, Gaikindo chairman Sudirman MR and secretary general Noegardjito both suggested that the group was mulling a correction in its annual sales target of 1.2 million units — the same as the previous year’s target — in April. Car sales dipped by 1.8 percent to 1.21 million in the past year, the first drop in five years after robust annual sales that analysts described as an “automotive boom”. The downward spiral of the rupiah has pushed automakers into greater awareness of slight changes in vehicle sales, which will remain stagnant on weaker purchasing power despite the falling prices of fuel amid a global oil glut. According to Suparno Djasmin, vice president director of PT Toyota Astra Motors (TAM), provisional sales figures in the first two months of the year indicated that the automotive industry would face an uphill battle to achieve even last year’s target.