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  • Economy

    Seoul stocks, won hammered by massive foreign selling

    Seoul stocks plunged Friday as a prolonged foreign sell-off collided with a sharp downturn in global semiconductor shares, sending the benchmark KOSPI down more than 5 percent to below the 8,200 level. The sustained foreign investor exodus also continued to weigh on the Korean won. In Seoul’s onshore foreign exchange market, the won closed at 1,539.1 per dollar, down 9.4 won from the previous session. During intraday trading, it briefly approached the 1,550 level, its weakest since March 2009, during the global financial crisis. The won has now traded above the 1,500 per dollar threshold for 14 consecutive sessions. KOSPI opened at 8,323.20, down 3.66 percent from the previous session, according to the Korea Exchange. Heavy selling pressure persisted throughout the day, prompting the year’s 10th sidecar shortly after the opening bell — a market safeguard that temporarily suspends program trading during periods of extreme volatility. The index ultimately closed at 8,160.59, down 5.54 percent. Foreign and institutional investors drove the decline, selling a net 3.52 trillion won and

    2 MIN READBy Park Han-sol
    Seoul stocks, won hammered by  massive foreign selling
  • Economy

    Korea diversifying LNG imports to ease Middle East dependence: KOGAS chief

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Korea diversifying LNG imports to ease Middle East dependence: KOGAS chief
  • Economy

    Korea's currency tumbles to 17-year low on foreign stock selloff

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Korea's currency tumbles to 17-year low on foreign stock selloff
  • Economy

    Gov't vows to lower barriers for foreign investors with 24-hour FX market

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Gov't vows to lower barriers for foreign investors with 24-hour FX market
  • Economy

    KRX issues sell-side sidecar for KOSPI on sharp fall

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    KRX issues sell-side sidecar for KOSPI on sharp fall
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Others

Weak won bites Naver-controlled Webtoon Entertainment after high-profile Nasdaq debut

Webtoon Entertainment, a Naver-controlled, Nasdaq-listed company, is grappling with pressure on earnings from a weakening won after its high-profile debut on the New York stock market last year, industry officials said Friday. The company reports its sales in U.S. dollars as a U.S.-listed company, while around 60 percent of its shares are owned by Korean internet giant Naver and roughly 24 percent are held by LY Corp., a joint venture between Naver and the Japanese multinational investment conglomerate SoftBank. Meanwhile, the company depends heavily on revenue from paid webtoons operated by its subsidiary Naver Webtoon, with Korea and Japan accounting for 88 percent of total sales. Under these circumstances, industry officials said sales in the fourth quarter are likely to decline from the previous quarter, as the won has weakened further against the dollar. According to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Webtoon Entertainment posted $378.04 million in third-quarter sales, calculated using an average exchange rate of 1,385.4 won per dollar. While sales rose 8.7 percent year-on-

Dec 26, 2025By Yi Whan-woo
Weak won bites Naver-controlled Webtoon Entertainment after high-profile Nasdaq debut
Economy

Silver tops $75 as gold and platinum surge to records

Gold, silver, and platinum hit record highs on Friday, as speculative momentum and thinning year-end liquidity powered the precious metals, along with markets pricing in more U.S. rate cuts, and rising geopolitical tension. Spot gold rose 0.6 percent to $4,504.79 per ounce, as of 0423 GMT, after touching a record $4,530.60 earlier, while ‍U.S. gold futures for February delivery climbed 0.7 percent to $4,535.20. Spot silver jumped 3.6 percent to $74.56 per ounce, after touching an all-time high of $75.14. "Momentum-driven and speculative players have been powering the rally in gold and silver since early December, with thin year-end liquidity, expectations of prolonged U.S. rate cuts, a weaker dollar and a flare-up in geopolitical risks combining to push precious metals to fresh ‍record highs," said Kelvin Wong, senior market analyst at OANDA. "Looking ahead into the first ‍half of 2026, gold could move towards the $5,000 level, while silver has the potential to reach around $90." Gold ‌has staged a strong rally this year, recording its biggest annual gain since 1979, fueled ‍by

Dec 26, 2025By Reuters
Silver tops $75 as gold and platinum surge to records
Economy

S. Korea selects 12 won-yuan direct trading market makers for 2026

The South Korean central bank said Friday it has selected seven local lenders and five foreign banks with branches in the country as market makers for direct trading between the South Korean won and the Chinese yuan next year. The seven local won-yuan market makers for 2026 are KB Kookmin Bank, NH Nonghyup Bank, Shinhan Bank, Woori Bank, Industrial Bank of Korea, Hana Bank and Korea Development Bank. The five foreign banks are China Construction Bank Corp., Bank of Communications Co., Ltd., Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd., Bank of China Ltd. and HSBC Holdings PLC., according to the Bank of Korea (BOK). The BOK annually updates the list of banks participating in the won-yuan direct trading market to allow interbank and customer spot transactions without conversion into the U.S. dollar. The selected banks will also be tasked with leading efforts to provide liquidity to the market. "The market-maker system has contributed significantly to the successful establishment of the won-yuan direct trading market and is expected to continue playing a crucial role in developing the market

Dec 26, 2025By Yonhap
S. Korea selects 12 won-yuan direct trading market makers for 2026
Economy

Egg prices surge amid concerns over bird flu-induced supply disruption

Egg prices have surged recently, industry data showed Thursday, raising concerns over potential supply disruptions linked to the spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza. The average retail price of a carton of 30 large eggs exceeded 7,000 won ($4.83) last week, according to the data from the Korea Institute for Animal Products Quality Evaluation. Prices had remained in the 6,000-won range since last month before climbing back above the 7,000-won mark. Separate data from the statistics ministry showed egg prices rose 7.3 percent in September from a year earlier, outpacing the 5.3 percent increase in overall livestock product prices. On Wednesday, the country reported three new cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza, bringing the total number of infections this season to 21. During the winter season, outbreaks at egg-laying hen farms totaled 11 cases, nearly double the number recorded during the same period last year. The agriculture ministry said about 3 million egg-laying hens have been culled so far this winter following confirmed outbreaks. Korea produces roughly 50 million eggs

Dec 25, 2025By Yonhap
Egg prices surge amid concerns over bird flu-induced supply disruption
Economy

Korean won ranks 5th-weakest globally even after authorities intervene

The Korean won has been the fifth-weakest currency globally despite verbal interventions by financial authorities to curb its volatility, data showed Thursday. The data, compiled by the Bank of Korea, shows the won has fallen 3.3 percent against the U.S. dollar in the fourth quarter through Wednesday. Among 42 currencies tracked by the central bank, this decline ranks fifth, following the Argentine peso at 6.8 percent, Japanese yen at 5.1 percent, Brazilian real at 3.7 percent and Taiwanese dollar at 3.3 percent. The depreciation came even after financial authorities verbally intervened, Wednesday, prompting a gain of 33.8 won, its strongest one-day rise in more than three years, to close at 1,449.8 won during daytime trading. The exchange rate remained in the 1,480-won range over the previous two days, marking the first consecutive two-day stay in this range since the 2009 global financial crisis. In the fourth quarter so far, the U.S. dollar index, which measures the dollar against six major currencies, has remained between 97 and 98. A reading above 100 indicates a strengthening dollar

Dec 25, 2025By Yi Whan-woo
Korean won ranks 5th-weakest globally even after authorities intervene
Economy

Global investment banks raise S. Korea's 2026 inflation outlook amid weak currency

Major financial institutions have raised their 2026 inflation forecasts for South Korea, citing the continued weakness of the local currency against the U.S. dollar, industry data showed Thursday. According to forecasts from 37 institutions, including major investment banks (IBs), compiled by Bloomberg, the median projection for the country's consumer inflation for next year stands at 2 percent. It marks an increase of 0.1 percentage point from 1.9 percent presented at the end of last month. Fourteen institutions have revised up their forecasts during the period, while only three lowered them. The remaining institutions kept their projections unchanged. Last month, the Bank of Korea presented its latest inflation outlook for next year, raising its forecast to 2.1 percent from the previous 1.9 percent. The central bank also warned that consumer inflation could rise to the mid-2 percent range if the domestic currency remains weak. The Korean won has hovered near its yearly low in recent weeks, nearing the 1,500 won level this week after slipping below the psychologically important 1,450 won

Dec 25, 2025By Yonhap
Global investment banks raise S. Korea's 2026 inflation outlook amid weak currency
Others

Top 10 Economic News Stories of 2025 A year marked by tariff truce, KOSPI 4,000 era

Korea’s economy was shaped by major external shocks and policy pivots in 2025. After months of stalled talks, Korea and the United States agreed on a deal cutting U.S. tariffs on key Korean exports to 15 percent, easing pressure on exporters. At the same time, the won weakened sharply, hovering near levels last seen during the 1998 Asian financial crisis. The government also pushed ahead with structural reforms, including separating budget functions from the finance ministry and revising the Commercial Act to strengthen shareholder rights. Financial markets were a study in contrasts. The "KOSPI 4,000 era” began as trading reached new heights, fueled by an AI-driven semiconductor supercycle. However, the rally was heavily concentrated in large-cap stocks, leaving concerns over volatility and overseas profit-taking unresolved. The real economy saw uneven sectoral performance. Korea’s battery industry was forced into restructuring due to a prolonged global EV slowdown, while consumer goods such as instant noodles and cosmetics posted record export growth on the back of K-content popul

Dec 25, 2025By Jun Ji-hye and Lee Gyu-lee
[Top 10 Economic News Stories of 2025] A year marked by tariff truce, KOSPI 4,000 era
Cryptocurrency

Why 2026 could mark crypto's next expansion phase in Korea

Cryptocurrency entered 2025 with a euphoric rally. Clearer regulatory signals from major economies and a more accommodative policy backdrop helped propel Bitcoin to a record $126,000. Institutional capital flowed steadily into the market, with some companies adding digital assets to their balance sheets under strategic allocations. Sentiment reversed sharply toward year-end. Concerns over U.S. trade policy sparked capital outflows, while expected Federal Reserve rate cuts were slower to materialize than markets had anticipated. The selloff intensified after October, when a renewed U.S. tariff pledge on China triggered about $19 billion in forced liquidations. "Sixteen years after the genesis block, crypto's secular growth continues, sometimes painfully and occasionally awkwardly — but growing all the same," Presto Research wrote in its Dec. 18 report. "Welcome to crypto's teenage phase." 2025 proved to be a mixed year, but market watchers largely agree on one point: the industry is moving steadily toward a more polished, mainstream future. "When I look back on 2025, what stands out is

Dec 25, 2025By Lee Yeon-woo
Why 2026 could mark crypto's next expansion phase in Korea
Economy

Seoul stocks snap 3-day rise on profit-taking; won posts sharpest increase in 3 yrs

Korean stocks closed lower Wednesday, snapping a three-day winning streak as retail investors moved to take profit following a recent rally of tech and shipbuilding shares. The local currency rose at the sharpest pace against the U.S. dollar in over three years following strong verbal intervention by foreign exchange (FX) authorities. After starting higher, the benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) closed 8.7 points, or 0.21 percent, lower at 4,108.62. Trade volume was moderate at 351.5 million shares worth 11.95 trillion won ($8.2 billion), with losers outnumbering winners 481 to 378. Despite overnight gains on Wall Street led by stronger-than-expected U.S. growth data and a bullish run of blue chip tech shares, retail investors here unloaded 717.5 billion won on profit-taking sentiment. Foreigners and institutions continued their buying spree, purchasing a net 520 billion won and 200 billion won worth of local shares, respectively. The Korean won was quoted at 1,449.8 won against the greenback at 3:30 p.m., up 33.8 won from the previous session's close, marking the biggest

Dec 24, 2025By Yonhap
Seoul stocks snap 3-day rise on profit-taking; won posts sharpest increase in 3 yrs
Policy

Korean currency strengthens at steepest pace in 3 years after authorities' intervention

The Korean currency slowed its freefall, closing at 1,449.8 won per dollar in daytime trading, Wednesday — improving by 33.8 won from the previous day’s close and hitting the strongest pace of gain in more than three years — following authorities’ verbal intervention to curb volatility reminiscent of past financial crises. The gain of 33.8 won was the steepest since Nov. 11, 2022, when the local currency climbed by 59.1 won against the dollar. This rebound came after officials from the Ministry of Economy and Finance and the Bank of Korea (BOK) jointly issued a statement, as the won-dollar exchange rate had surged to the 1,480 level earlier this week. The closing rate was at 1,480.10 won on Monday and again 1,483.6 won on Tuesday, marking the first time since 2009 during the global financial crisis that the exchange rate ended two consecutive days in the 1,480 range. The exchange rate also opened at 1,484.9 won on Wednesday. Under the circumstances, the joint statement said, “An excessive weakness of the won is not desirable, and the market will soon see the government’s stro

Dec 24, 2025By Yi Whan-woo
Korean currency strengthens at steepest pace in 3 years after authorities' intervention
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