Marketplace

  • Forex
  • Advertise here

Features

Helpful Links

Contact

« USD hits 7-month high | Main | Hong Kong liberalizes currency »

May 18, 2005

South Korea renounces forex intervention

At $206 billion, South Korea's foreign exchange reserves are currently the fourth largest in the world. However, this distinction may be short-lived. The Bank of Korea announced today that it will no longer intervene in forex markets, which it had done previously to prevent the Won from appreciating against the USD. This reversal in policy is sensible, as its previous intervention efforts were all in vain. The Won has appreciated 17% against the dollar this year alone. Banking officials indicated that the profitability- or lack thereof- of its reserves is behind the decision. When measured in terms of Won, South Korea's dollar-denominated forex reserves depreciate in value every day. Some analysts reacted to the news with mixed feelings, fearing that South Korea would begin diversifying its reserves, after foreswearing intervention. The Financial Times reports:

Mr Park said he did not envisage changing the currency mix of the reserves, about two-thirds of which is thought to be in dollar-denominated assets. In February the dollar recorded its biggest drop in five months when a Bank of Korea report said it would diversify its foreign exchange reserves.

Read More: South Korea rules out further currency intervention


Free Forex Newsletter

Subscribe to our free forex investing newsletter, published monthly. Enter your email address:


Syndicate

RSS Feed
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to MyMSN
Subscribe at NewsGator Online
Subscribe at Bloglines