www.thejakartaglobe.com - Indonesian two-year sukuk, or the Islamic equivalent of bonds fell last
month, pushing up yields by the most since September, as Standard &
Poor's, kept the nation’s credit rating at junk after the government
maintained fuel subsidies. Yields on sovereign 8.8 percent
Shariah-compliant dollar-denominated bonds due April 2014 climbed 39
basis points to 2.92 percent on
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