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How Far May the Won Fall in 2008?

Source: http://southkoreaeconomy.blogspot.com/2008/03/how-far-may-won-fall-in-2008.html
Posted on Tuesday, March 11th, 2008 | In Korea
Contributed by: Claus Vistesen (http://clausvistesen.squarespace.com/) -

South Korea’s won may fall considerably in the first half of 2008 as global credit-market losses lead overseas funds to sell holdings in Korean stocks according to a report out this week from State Street Global Markets.

The 3.1 percent drop so far this month in the Won’s value vis a vis the dollar make it the world’s worst currently performing major-exchange rate. Many economists consider that the decline will continue if the current-account deficit widens and the funds from stock sales continues.

Overseas investors have sold more Korean shares than they bought nearly every day this year on concern slowing global economic growth will damp demand for exports. Korea’s won and the Indian rupee are the only two of Asia’s 10 most-traded currencies outside of Japan that have weakened versus the dollar in 2008.

Cross-over equity flows, or purchases of stocks by overseas investors, into South Korea are the second weakest among the 29 developed and emerging-markets economies tracked by State Street Global Markets, the world’s largest institutional money manager, and Korea’s stock index has slipped 14.1 percent so far this year.

Korea’s currency fell 1 percent this morning to 974.45 per dollar as of 1:41 p.m. local time, and this was the biggest decline since last August with the won reaching its lowest level since March 2006.

Korea’s current-account is expected to run a $7 billion deficit this year according to the finance ministry yesterday, a figure which is twice the central bank’s $3 billion forecast. Growth will fall short of 5 percent in 2008 and an earlier estimate of 6 percent because of slowing shipments abroad, Finance Minister Kang Man Soo said last week.

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About Claus Vistesen (http://clausvistesen.squarespace.com/)
Claus Vistesen is a 23 year old macroeconomist on the verge of finishing his MSc in Applied Economics and Finance from the Copenhagen Business School. His primary research interests are international finance and international macroeconomics, especially, the changing structure of global and national demographics. Claus takes an interest in the econometrics discipline which he intends to dig deeper into post graduate.

He primarily writes out of his own blog Alpha.Sources as well as Global Economy Matters. He liaises closely with his colleague and friend Edward Hugh whom he develops and produces research material and articles with. In terms of specific topics Claus tracks the European economies as well as Japan as his main areas of focus.

Claus has been online with Alpha.Sources since September 2005 and has realized how a serious online presence can be an asset in terms of academic work as well as on a personal relationship level. He is grateful for the reactions, opinions, and contacts he has received through this site.

The interaction between macroeconomics and demographics is a strong anchor in what goes on at Alpha.Sources, and his work in general. In the end, Alpha.Sources represents a way for Claus to conceptualize his thoughts and views on the surrounding world, so no boxes and boundaries can be set on the content.

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