The $350 bil. question: Korea must negotiate like a strategic power, not a reactive one
The Korean won appears to be pricing in risks that belie the current, strong domestic economic data. Despite improving growth, booming semiconductor orders and benign inflation, the Korean won is underperforming emerging market peers — depreciating 2.74 percent against the U.S. dollar since September, compared to declines of 1.36 percent for the Thai baht, 0.82 percent for the Indian rupee and 0.09 percent for the Malaysian ringgit over the same period. We believe the market is pricing in uncertainty arising from Korea’s tariff deal with the U.S., which involves investing $350 billion in the U.S. as part of a tariff adjustment framework to avoid the impact of punitively high, immediate U.S. tariffs. The government has yet to officially explain the implications of this investment amount and how it will be structured, creating turmoil among markets and the public. The domestic debate has broken into two predictable camps, both partisan and not well considered, in our view. One side says Korea should reject U.S. demands outright, citing national interests and pride, while the other a
