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Bank of Korea’s Lee Sees Virus Outsizing Financial Crisis Impact

The Bank of Korea left its key interest rate unchanged, opting to preserve policy room after last month’s unprecedented steps.

Bank of Korea’s Lee Sees Virus Outsizing Financial Crisis Impact
Pedestrians cross a road outside the entrance to the Bank of Korea (BOK) museum at the central bank’s headquarters in Seoul, South Korea. (Photographer: Jean Chung/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju-yeol warned the economy would take a bigger hit from the coronavirus pandemic than the global financial crisis, but stopped short of another big ramping up of stimulus for now.

South Korea’s central bank held its policy rate at 0.75% in a move forecast by nine of 17 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The BOK announced further measures to channel liquidity to the economy, expanding the range of bonds eligible for its open market operations and flagging outright purchases of government bonds.

Bank of Korea’s Lee Sees Virus Outsizing Financial Crisis Impact

The stand-pat decision and Governor Lee’s comments suggested that while the outlook for the economy is bad, the bank would rather bide its time before any further major moves. Lee said the BOK still has room to take rates below the current record low, and pledged to take active steps within the legal boundaries set out for the bank.

“The chances of a global recession are high, with the shock to economies expected to be larger than that during the global financial crisis,” Lee said in a post-decision briefing. South Korea’s economic growth will significantly trail the 2.1% forecast made in February, but will manage to stay above 0% this year, according to Lee.

The BOK is taking stock after a flurry of measures last month, including an emergency rate cut and a pledge to inject unlimited liquidity into the market via repurchase agreements. South Korea’s government is also rolling out stimulus like never before, with a second extra budget lined up.

“Considering the diminishing ammunition after previous cuts, it’s not surprising the BOK is holding,” said Chang Min, a researcher at the Korea Institute of Finance and a former central bank official. “This doesn’t mean that the situation is improving, though. The BOK is likely to keep coming out with non-rate measures to stabilize markets.”

While the BOK has taken unprecedented steps to backstop the economy, they have been relatively modest compared with global peers who cut rates close to zero and stepped into quantitative easing. While some of the moves Lee has taken to ensure ample liquidity could inch the BOK a little closer toward QE, there’s still no clear sign the bank is ready to take a deep plunge into non-conventional policy.

The South Korean bank appears to prefer more targeted approaches, while preserving bazooka shots of another rate cut and non-traditional measures for when the economy is in emergent need. Lee said BOK lending to private firms could exceed the typical role of a central bank and would require discussions with the government.

South Korea’s bond futures jumped while government bond yields fell as Lee said the central bank would announce an outright purchase of government bonds later in the day. After Lee’s briefing, the BOK said it planned outright purchases of 1.5 trillion won worth of government bonds to help financial firms unload some of their holdings to increase their liquidity. The amount was in line with a previous operation.

Slowing Growth

With the pandemic continuing to wreak havoc on South Korean economy, the BOK’s rate pause may indeed be short-lived. About half of the surveyed analysts had expected the BOK to ease on Thursday. Two of the BOK’s board members dissented and called for an immediate 25 basis point cut at the meeting.

While virus cases are slowing in South Korea and in China, its largest trade partner, a recovery in global demand is elusive as large parts of the world are at a virtual standstill. South Korea’s government also extended its social-distancing rules as a precaution against a second wave of infections.

Many economists expect South Korea to grow this year at the weakest pace since the Asian financial crisis two decades ago, or even contract. Recent reports show South Korea’s retail sales, confidence, and investment all sliding, and a mild contraction in exports is set to deepen as the pandemic puts global supply chains in disarray and hurts overall demand.

One silver lining though amid the pandemic has been greater demand for the country’s memory chips, the largest source of export revenue. Increase in online activities has led to Samsung Electronics beating earnings estimates this week.

“The BOK has left the door open for another cut by mentioning it still has room,” said Yoon Yeo-sam, a fixed income analyst at Meritz Securities. “But Lee won’t necessarily go overboard, given that he says markets have become stable. A rate cut and loans to securities companies are cards that he could use if situations get worse.”

The BOK’s next scheduled meeting is May 28, when the bank will revise its 2.1% growth and 1% inflation projections for this year. The board will have new faces by then, as four of the seven-member board have terms that end April 20.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.