South Korea holds key interest rate steady as won soars

Reuters

Published Jan 17, 2018 08:27PM ET

South Korea holds key interest rate steady as won soars

By Cynthia Kim and Christine Kim

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's central bank held interest rates steady on Thursday, as expected, as it monitored the effects of its November hike and remained wary of triggering disruptive capital flows.

The Bank of Korea's Monetary Policy Board voted to keep the benchmark interest rate at 1.50 percent at what was the second last rate-setting meeting for Governor Lee Ju-yeol before his term ends in March.

All 17 analysts surveyed by Reuters between Jan. 8 and 15 predicted the BOK would keep the seven-day repurchase rate unchanged on Thursday after raising it for the first time in six years in November, ending a five-year easing cycle amid a sustained export boom.

South Korean policymakers are grappling with an unusual surge in the won against the dollar and households saddled with debt after a property-buying spree, supporting analysts' views that monetary policy will remain accommodative in 2018.

The Korean won has soared to its highest in more than three years since the board last met on Nov. 30, while consumer inflation in December remained below the bank's target of 2 percent.

The won touched as high as 1058.8 on Jan. 8, its highest intraday trading level since October 2014.

"The won soaring through the new year period will keep policymakers on hold for now, along with the need to monitor policy changes abroad," said Lee Jae-hyung, a fixed-income analyst at Yuanta Securities.

The won was muted after the BOK decision, trading at 1,069.1 per dollar as of 0101 GMT compared to its previous close of 1,069.3. The benchmark Kospi (KS11) was up 0.4 percent at 2,523.87, nearly unchanged from opening on Thursday.

Growth in the third quarter showed the biggest jump in seven years, expanding 1.5 percent from a quarter earlier on exports driven by strong global demand for memory chips.

The finance ministry expects the economic recovery to continue this year, but sees the economy growing at a slightly slower pace than last year's pace of 3.2 percent as slowing investment weighs on the economy.

The bank is due to release new economic estimates at 1:30 p.m. (0430 GMT).

Kim Ji-man, a fixed-income analyst at HMC Investment & Securities, said a significant upward revision in the BOK's growth outlook for this year from the current 2.9 percent could provide further clues on its next move.

"July this year would probably be appropriate for the bank to raise interest rates again, as policymakers would be able to confirm if growth for the first half is on track for solid recovery by then," Kim said.