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Fed Rate Hikes Make Outlook Even Worse for Slammed Korean Won

Fed Rate Hikes Make Outlook Even Worse for Slammed Korean Won

The South Korean won was Asia’s worst performer over the last six months, and technical indicators suggest the misery isn’t yet over. 

The won dropped to a 17-month low last week, breaching a key support level. Other indicators, including the moving average convergence-divergence, suggest that the tech-dependent currency could slip further against the dollar.

The Bank of Korea could give traders more reason to sell the won this Friday if it disappoints the likes of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc., who are calling for a third rate increase sooner than later. With the Federal Reserve turning increasingly hawkish, a hike may still not be enough to stem the currency’s decline if the BOK signals a slowdown in policy normalization.

Fed Rate Hikes Make Outlook Even Worse for Slammed Korean Won

Read More: Goldman Now Sees Korea Raising Rates Next Week on Hawkish Signs

“It appears that won is being impacted by higher U.S. yields as well as foreign equity outflows,” said Mitul Kotecha, chief EM Asia and Europe strategist at TD Securities in Singapore. “Pressure on tech stocks globally is also likely weighing on the currency. An absence of support from local exporters is keeping the door open to won downside.” 

A global selloff at the start of 2022 is weighing on Korea’s tech-dependent market, which suffered a net outflow of $21 billion last year. Treasury 10-year yields have surged to their highest since April, denting sentiment for emerging-market assets.

The dollar-won pair rose beyond 1,200.35 last week, its 2021 high, to touch 1,203.90. The next key level would be near 1,214.09, the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the March 2020 to Jan. 2021 decline. Charts are also showing a bullish ascending triangle for the greenback against the Korean currency. 

Governor Lee Ju-yeol has previously played down the need to match the pace of the Fed’s rate hikes, doubling down that domestic factors are more important considerations. Any dovish rhetoric on Friday may help spur further won weakness, especially if investors react by paring back the 90 basis points of hikes they have priced in for this year.  

A majority of economists expect the BOK to raise rates to 1.25% in the first quarter, though their views are split on whether the move will come this Friday or at the next meeting in February. 

The currency may find some respite near the end of the month. Local exporters who have accumulated a sizable amount of dollars may start selling ahead of the Lunar New Year, when companies exchange the greenback into the won to pay to employees, according to Min Gyeong-won, an economist at Woori Bank in Seoul.  

Here are the key Asian economic data due this week: 

  • Monday, Jan. 10: Australia building approvals, Malaysia industrial production, Indonesia consumer confidence
  • Tuesday, Jan. 11: Australia retail sales and trade balance, Philippine trade balance
  • Wednesday, Jan. 12: India CPI and industrial production, China CPI and PPI, Australia job vacancies, Japan current account balance and BOJ Governor Kuroda speaks
  • Thursday, Jan. 13: Japan machine tool orders, Thailand consumer confidence
  • Friday, Jan. 14: Bank of Korea rate decision, China trade balance, Australia home loans, Japan PPI, India trade balance

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.