- South Korean President Lee Jae-myung met with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Besant in Seoul, formally proposing a bilateral currency swap agreement to address the potential liquidity tightening and exchange rate depreciation pressure on the Korean won, triggered by a $20 billion direct investment in the U.S.
- The U.S. Treasury responded by stating that the establishment of a liquidity swap mechanism requires policy consultations between the incoming Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Kevin Walsh and the Bank of Korea (BOK), indicating the division of authority between the U.S. executive branch and monetary authorities regarding intervention tools.
- This high-level bilateral economic dialogue took place on the eve of the U.S.-China summit, with the South Korean government simultaneously meeting with senior U.S. and Chinese trade representatives, aiming to maintain a dynamic balance in macroeconomic fundamentals and the foreign exchange market during the global supply chain restructuring cycle.
Investment Surge Triggers Forex Hedging Demand
South Korean companies' substantial direct investment in the U.S. is having a significant spillover effect on the foreign exchange market. If the $20 billion capital expenditure plan is realized in the short term, it will inevitably increase the demand for dollar purchases in the forex market, exerting substantial depreciation pressure on the won's spot exchange rate. A weaker won would not only raise the risk of imported inflation in South Korea but could also undermine the sustainability of Korean companies' subsequent overseas investments. Against this macroeconomic backdrop, the South Korean government views the currency swap agreement as a core financial hedging tool to stabilize forex market fluctuations and lock in exchange rate costs for cross-border investments. By obtaining a dollar liquidity swap quota, the Bank of Korea (BOK) can provide the necessary offshore dollar buffer to the domestic financial system without depleting existing foreign exchange reserves, thereby alleviating the structural impact of capital outflows on the local currency exchange rate.
Time Window for Central Bank Policy Coordination
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Besant's statement clearly pointed to the Federal Reserve (Fed) as the decision-maker for currency swaps. With Kevin Walsh set to take over the Fed, U.S.-South Korea monetary policy coordination will enter a new observation period. Historically, the Fed's standing currency swap network primarily targets a few core developed economies, while swap arrangements for non-core members like South Korea are usually temporary and crisis-responsive. The Bank of Korea (BOK) will need to engage in substantive technical negotiations with the new Fed leadership on the scale, duration, and trigger conditions of the swap agreement. The market will closely watch Walsh's policy stance on offshore dollar liquidity management after taking office, as it not only affects the short-term pricing of the won but also provides an important policy expectation anchor for other non-U.S. economies facing similar capital outflow pressures.
Geoeconomic Balance Amid Supply Chain Restructuring
South Korea's proposal for a currency swap goes beyond mere financial defense, deeply embedding itself in the global restructuring of critical mineral and semiconductor supply chains. Lee Jae-myung emphasized strengthening South Korea-U.S. cooperation in key mineral and supply chain areas, indicating that South Korea is attempting to leverage its strategic value in the real industrial chain as a bargaining chip for securing a financial safety net. Meanwhile, at the geopolitically sensitive juncture of the upcoming U.S.-China summit, South Korean leaders met separately with the trade heads of both countries, reflecting Seoul's cautious consideration in maintaining allied economic ties and geopolitical balance. If the macro liquidity environment continues to tighten, non-U.S. economies without central bank-level currency swap support may face macro risks of slowed overseas investment progress in supply chains.
Market Liquidity and Exchange Rate Pricing Outlook
From a quantitative observation of the microstructure of the forex market, the $20 billion scale of foreign investment is not unbearable compared to South Korea's normalized cross-border transaction volume, but the anticipated capital account deficit it releases may lead to the accumulation of one-way speculative positions by market participants. If the South Korea-U.S. bilateral currency swap agreement can smoothly enter substantive negotiation stages, it will significantly reduce the dollar financing premium for financial institutions, narrow the forex swap spread, and guide the won exchange rate back to a reasonable range determined by the fundamentals and interest rate differentials of the two countries. Conversely, if related policy negotiations stall, coupled with the Fed's potential high-interest rate path, the won-to-dollar exchange rate may test new technical support levels in the short term, prompting the Bank of Korea (BOK) to take more direct normalized intervention measures in the forex market.