Hana Bank's trading floor in central Seoul on Dec. 29, 2022, the last local trading day of the year (Courtesy of Yonhap) The South Korean won was expected to stay weaker than levels for corporate profits this year as the local currency was likely to stay under pressure from a slowdown in Asia’s fourth-largest economy and the sustained US monetary policy tightening bias, a survey of major companies’ chief financial officers showed.
The won was predicted to remain softer than the 1,200 per dollar level in 2023, said 86% of 50 CFOs of the country’s large companies with 14% of the total expecting the currency to weaken past the 1,300 level, according to The Korea Economic Daily’s poll published on Sunday.
UNCERTAINTIES IN MARKETS, HAWKISH FED, SLOWER GROWTH
Last year, the won depreciated 6% to 1,264.5 versus the greenback. The South Korean currency had lost as much as 17.7% to 1,444.2 on Oct. 25, 2022, the weakest since the 2008-09 global financial crisis.
The local unit is expected to stay volatile in 2023 as the domestic financial markets are likely to keep facing uncertainties and the US Federal Reserve is predicted to raise interest rates further, hurting the currency.
South Korea’s economy is also slowing down. The majority of the survey participants forecast economic growth for this year to be lower than 1.5%, while only 8% expected the economy to expand by more than 2%.
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