Stacks of 10,000-yen-bill bundles at Hana Bank headquarters in Seoul (File photo, courtesy of Yonhap) Yen-denominated deposits in South Korea slid for the first time in eight months as local investors took profits from the recent gains in the major currency despite expectations that the Bank of Japan may exit its ultra-loose monetary policy this year.
The balance of yen savings at five major South Korean lenders – KB Kookmin Bank, Shinhan Bank, Hana Bank, Woori Bank and NH Bank – totaled 1.1 trillion yen ($7.6 billion) as of the end of December 2023, down 5.3% from the previous month, according to domestic financial industry sources on Tuesday.
The retreat came as Japan’s central bank is unlikely to drastically shift monetary policy anytime soon, limiting the yen’s upside, even as last month the BOJ indicated an exit from its decade-long easing program, analysts in Seoul said.
The Japanese unit rose in December as the BOJ suggested it intends to end the ultra-loose policy once the authority sees sustained and stable 2% inflation powered by domestic demand and wage growth. The yen has risen as much as 8.8% to 9.2647 versus the South Korean won during the month from a 15-year low hit in November, according to Bloomberg data.
“The BOJ’s policy shift will be really slow,” said Baek Seok-hyun, an analyst at Shinhan Bank in Seoul. “It will be difficult to make satisfactory returns from investment in the yen at this point.”
Analysts in Seoul doubted the yen’s further rebound versus the South Korean currency.
"The BOJ may shift its policy this year but it won’t be easy to raise interest rates," said Park Sang-hyun, an economist at HI Investment & Securities. "The yen is likely to trade at around 9.2 to the won on average this year."
Shinhan’s Baek forecasted the Japanese unit’s upside to be capped at 9.5.
On Wednesday morning, the yen eased 0.2% to 9.1077 against the won.
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