Bank of Korea lowers interest rates for the fourth time, flags more cuts ahead

Bank of Korea lowers interest rates for the fourth time, flags more cuts ahead


This photo taken on Nov. 24, 2022 shows the building of Bank of Korea BOK in Seoul, South Korea. South Korea’s central bank on Thursday raised its policy rate to curb inflation, delivering six back-to-back rate hikes for the first time. (Photo by Wang Yiliang/Xinhua via Getty Images)

Wang Yiliang | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

South Korea’s central bank cut its policy interest rate by 25 basis points Thursday as the country faces a double-whammy of protracted political turmoil and Trump’s sweeping tariffs.

The Bank of Korea reduced rates to 2.5% from 2.75%, its lowest level since August 2022, in line with expectations among economists polled by Reuters. That marked the central bank’s fourth cut in the last six meetings.

The quarter-percentage rate cut came as the country continued to grapple with heightened political uncertainty following the botched attempt by former leader Yoon Suk Yeol to impose martial law in December.

South Korea was slapped with 25% reciprocal tariffs by the Trump administration, which were later suspended for 90 days. South Korean leaders are racing to strike a deal with the U.S. government before the July 8 deadline.

Both sides have stated that they aimed to agree on a package on tariffs and economic cooperation by then, but the South Korean minister for trade and industry said recently there was not enough time, and the upcoming election could delay it further.

South Koreans will head to the polls on June 3 to elect the next president. The snap election was called after Yeol was impeached as president and removed from office.

South Korea’s GDP growth unexpectedly contracted in the first quarter, shrinking 0.1% from a year earlier, according to advance estimates released last month. That marked its first contraction since the fourth quarter of 2020.

The BOK monetary policy board attributed the rate cut decision to its expectations that economic growth will “decline considerably” while inflation remains “broadly stable,” according to its statement.

“The board will maintain its rate cut stance to mitigate downside risks to economic growth and adjust the timing and pace of any further base rate cuts while closely monitoring changes in the domestic and external policy environment,” the statement said.

The central bank also slashed its full-year GDP forecast for 2025 to just 0.8%, considerably lower than the previous projection of 1.5%.

The election of a new president next week should lead to the introduction of “much-needed fiscal stimulus,” Gareth Leather, senior Asia economist at Capital Economics, said in a note, anticipating consumer spending to pick up.

Still, that boost may not be sufficient to offset the slump in the property sector and disruption in exports, dragging the full-year GDP growth to just 0.5%, Leather estimated.

The country’s Kospi stock index jumped 1.25% after the announcement, while the South Korean won weakened 0.71%, last trading at 1383.40 against the greenback.

South Korea planning more serious engagement with the US, says Korea's Trade and Industry Minister



Source

Trump says India will buy oil from Venezuela
World

Trump says India will buy oil from Venezuela

U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday said India will buy Venezuelan oil, helping to replace some of the Russian oil that the world’s third-biggest oil importer buys. “We’ve already made that deal, the concept of the deal,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he traveled to his vacation home in Florida from Washington. […]

Read More
India’s finance minister projects modest fiscal consolidation in budget
World

India’s finance minister projects modest fiscal consolidation in budget

India’s government plans a modest improvement in its fiscal picture in the coming financial year, with reductions in the fiscal deficit and debt, while boosting manufacturing in sectors ranging from textiles to chips. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in her ninth consecutive budget speech, said on Sunday that the government sees its fiscal deficit falling to […]

Read More
AstraZeneca is listing in New York, as Big Pharma balances the huge U.S. market with China’s tempting innovation
World

AstraZeneca is listing in New York, as Big Pharma balances the huge U.S. market with China’s tempting innovation

Pharma giant AstraZeneca will list on the New York Stock Exchange on Monday, days after it announced big commitments on the other side of the world. Like the rest of Big Pharma, the company has a balancing act. It wants a close relationship with the U.S., its biggest market, and the listing is intended to […]

Read More