South Korea’s June inflation hits 24-year high, raising expectations for a big rate hike

South Korea’s June inflation hits 24-year high, raising expectations for a big rate hike


A photo showing workers setting up scaffolding beneath the logo of the Bank of Korea at its headquarters in Seoul on January 14, 2022. South Korea’s June inflation accelerated to the fastest pace since the Asian financial crisis, fanning expectations the central bank could deliver a 50 basis point rake hike for the first time next week to cool prices and curb capital outflows.

Jung Yeon-je | Afp | Getty Images

South Korea’s June inflation accelerated to the fastest pace since the Asian financial crisis, fanning expectations the central bank could deliver a 50 basis point rake hike for the first time next week to cool prices and curb capital outflows.

The consumer price index (CPI) rose 6.0% in June from a year earlier, government data showed on Tuesday, the fastest since November 1998 and exceeding the central bank’s 2% target for the 15th consecutive month.

The CPI also sped up from a 5.4% rise in the previous month and exceeded the 5.9% tipped in a Reuters poll.

Tuesday’s data comes after Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong said he will keep the door open for a possible 50 basis point hike as he monitors key economic data before the bank’s next rate decision on July 13.

A half-percentage-point interest rate increase, if delivered, will be the first-time in the central bank’s history.

In a meeting held after inflation data release, BOK deputy governor Lee Hwan-seok said the bank “needs to be particularly vigilant against further strengthening of inflationary expectations,” adding current inflation trends will continue for the time being.

September futures on three-year treasury bonds rose 0.15 points, while those on 10-year bonds gained 0.09 points. The Kospi was up 1.77% at 2,341.08 and the won edged up.

The BOK has delivered five 25-basis-point interest rate hikes since last August to 1.75%, the highest since mid-2019, joining a global wave of policy tightening as central banks grapple with price spikes not seen in decades.

Chances of a 50 basis point hike have been growing after the U.S. Federal Reserve in June raised its rate by 75 basis points.

Many market watchers speculate the BOK would want to keep the rate spread between South Korea and the United States in check to slow any capital outflows.

“This data raises possibility of a big step hike in July,” said Ahn Jae-kyun, an analyst at Shinhan Financial Investment.

“Inflation expectations are also at a high level, so even if the headline inflation didn’t hit 6%, the BOK now has all the right reasons go for a big step.”

The BOK sees the inflation trajectory higher than projected earlier and said it would closely assess debt repayment burdens to determine whether a half-percentage point hike would be appropriate.

Even so, analysts have been warning that household debt at a record level and slowing exports growth mean the BOK shouldn’t rush rate hikes.

Overseas sales of South Korean goods logged their slowest growth in 19 months in June, fueling concerns about the health of the economy.

“Policymaking will become all the more difficult as they have a mix of upside inflation risks and downside economic growth risks continuing for the time being,” said Park Seok-gil, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase Bank. “We expect a 50 bp rate increase in July by the BOK and three 25-bp increases for the rest of this year.”

The core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 3.9% from a year ago, the fastest pace since February 2009.

The June CPI rose 0.6% on a monthly basis, also exceeding a 0.5% rise seen in the survey.



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