Foreign exchange counter at Incheon International Airport, South Korea’s hub airport (Courtesy of Yonhap) The South Korean state-run National Pension Service (NPS) has been spotted selling dollars for won, supporting the ailing local unit, as the world’s third-largest such fund may have seen the currency bottoming out, foreign exchange market sources in Seoul said.
The NPS sold dollar/won forwards as “tactical” currency hedging on overseas investments, which indicated the pension fund may not expect the South Korean currency to weaken further, said sources with direct knowledge of the trading.
On Tuesday, the NPS, which manages 882.7 trillion won ($616 billion) in assets as of end-June, was suspected of dumping dollars, according to currency market sources.
“The market saw unusually large volumes of dollar sales,” said one of the sources. “The NPS may have aggressively sold dollars.” The dollar/won trading volume totaled $9.1 billion in the domestic foreign exchange market on the day, the largest volume since Sept. 6.
An NPS official said the dollar selling was routine trading and the fund did not have any particular reason for its sales.
STABILIZATION MEASURES
The NPS has been blamed for the weakness in the won, the worst performer among emerging Asian currencies with a 17.1% loss against the dollar so far this year, as the fund raised overseas investments.
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