Experts forecast won-dollar annual average at 1,420 amid ongoing stabilization efforts

Building on recent verbal interventions, including a December 24 joint statement, experts predict the Korean won-dollar exchange rate will average 1,420 for 2025. The won fell to a post-November low of 1,440.3 per dollar on Friday, as authorities' measures continue through year-end.

Financial authorities' intensified verbal interventions, following the December 24 joint press notice deeming excessive won weakness undesirable, have formed a new psychological resistance level, curbing the currency's slide. The won closed at 1,440.3 per dollar on Friday—its lowest since November 4—after surging over 30 won last week amid these efforts, per Seoul Money Brokerage Services.

"The government's stabilization measures are likely to remain significant till the end of the year," said Baek Seok-hyun, economist at Shinhan Bank's S&T Center, predicting a year-end close in the 1,400-1,420 range.

Woori Bank's Lim Hwan-yeol sees year-end around 1,440, driven by export firms likely releasing dollar reserves. Year-end rates benchmark foreign-currency liabilities in financial statements; the 1997 crisis peak was 1,695 won.

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The South Korean won weakened sharply to 1,529.7 won per dollar on June 4, its lowest intraday level since March 31, amid renewed U.S.-Iran airstrikes. The KOSPI closed down 1.84 percent at 8,639.41.

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said on Friday in Washington that the Korean won has stabilized against the U.S. dollar at around 1,460 won per dollar following Iran's reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. He expressed hopes that the won will appreciate in line with market expectations. Koo was in the U.S. capital for G20 finance ministers and central bank governors meetings.

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The South Korean won weakened sharply against the US dollar on Wednesday amid lingering Middle East uncertainties and hotter-than-expected US inflation data.

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