- The South Korean foreign exchange market has largely absorbed the approximately $1.5 billion foreign exchange conversion demand related to SpaceX's initial public offering (IPO). In previous weeks, this cross-border capital flow had significantly pressured the Korean won exchange rate.
- Due to the strong subscription demand exceeding $250 billion for SpaceX's IPO on the international market, domestic institutions and retail investors in South Korea scrambled to gather dollars, causing the won to hit a 17-year low against the dollar last week.
- As the short-term capital outflow pressure subsides, the won strengthened during Wednesday's trading. Meanwhile, South Korean regulators plan to conduct a joint inspection for the first time in 14 years to stabilize the onshore foreign exchange market.
Offshore Subscription Demand Causes Temporary Imbalance in Forex Market
According to insiders, the rush by domestic institutions and high-net-worth retail investors in South Korea to gather funds for SpaceX's IPO led to a sharp increase in dollar conversion demand in the short term. Market feedback indicates that SpaceX's fundraising plan has garnered unprecedented attention in the international capital markets, with global subscription demand exceeding $250 billion, far surpassing its original $75 billion fundraising target. This phenomenon has exerted sustained capital outflow pressure on the won's onshore forex market over the past few weeks, causing the won to plummet to a 17-year low against the dollar. As the final pricing point approaches on Thursday, the allocation ratios for related institutions and retail investors are about to be determined. The dollar purchase orders, ranging between $1.2 billion and $1.5 billion, are now in the final stages of phased execution, fundamentally resolving the short-term supply-demand imbalance.
Capital Scale and Onshore Market Liquidity Depth Trigger Resonance
Although the $1.5 billion capital outflow is not large compared to South Korea's strong macroeconomic indicators, with April's current account surplus reaching $28.3 billion, near historical highs, the concentrated one-time dollar demand has significantly disrupted the local currency exchange rate. The core reason is the relatively shallow liquidity pool in South Korea's dollar-to-won spot forex market. The current average daily trading volume in the onshore market is only about $14 billion, meaning that single or short-term concentrated cross-border capital flows can easily cause local supply-demand mismatches, amplifying exchange rate volatility. Boosted by the end of capital outflow demand, the won rebounded in Wednesday's midday trading, rising 0.56% against the dollar to 1,524.1 won.
Regulators Restart Joint Inspections After Fourteen Years to Prevent Speculation
Facing the underperformance of the won among major Asian currencies, South Korean forex regulators are significantly increasing routine intervention and guidance efforts to defend the stability of the local currency exchange rate. Since the beginning of the year, the won has depreciated nearly 5% against the dollar. To curb potential pro-cyclical behavior in the market and combat speculative arbitrage, the Bank of Korea and the Financial Supervisory Service announced they will conduct a comprehensive on-site inspection of major domestic forex-designated banks for the first time in 14 years. Regulators have made it clear that this move aims to eliminate any attempts to manipulate exchange rates or amplify market panic to gain undue profits by exploiting large cross-border IPO events or short-term liquidity tensions, ensuring the overall resilience and compliance of the financial market.
Future Forex Trends Depend on Macroeconomic Fundamentals and Pricing Results
With the large-scale forex conversion demand related to SpaceX's IPO largely absorbed by the market, the direct capital outflow pressure on the won forex market is expected to significantly ease. However, market analysts point out that the long-term trend of the won will still be constrained by multiple macro variables. If global core inflation rebounds or major central banks' monetary policies turn weaker than expected, the global dollar index may remain strong, causing non-dollar currencies, including the won, to continue facing valuation pressure. Conversely, if the high prosperity of South Korea's domestic exports can continue to translate into onshore market settlement demand, and if regulatory joint inspections effectively suppress pro-cyclical speculative behavior, the won exchange rate is expected to gradually return to the fundamental track supported by the current account surplus and achieve further volatility convergence once the cross-border IPO pricing is settled.