South Korea foreign reserves rise by $370 million in June

The Bank of Korea said on July 3 that the country's foreign reserves reached $427.36 billion at end-June, up $370 million from a month earlier and reversing a May decline.

The Bank of Korea attributed the increase to a $920 million rise in foreign currency deposits held by financial institutions, despite stabilization steps such as foreign exchange swaps with the National Pension Service.

Foreign securities fell $330 million to $380.34 billion and accounted for 89 percent of total reserves. Special drawing rights decreased $140 million.

The Korean won traded above 1,500 per dollar throughout June and closed at 1,549.4 on June 30, the weakest level since March 6, 2009.

South Korea ranked as the world's 13th-largest holder of foreign reserves at end-May, down one place from April. China, Japan, Switzerland, Russia and India led the list.

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Illustration of South Korean won hitting low amid Middle East tensions, with currency and stock market decline.
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South Korean won hits over 2-month low on Middle East tensions

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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.

Kenya's foreign reserves fell by Ksh11.77 billion this week to USD 13.149 billion, the Central Bank of Kenya reported on 20 June 2026. The decline occurred as the government prepares to close its 2025/2026 fiscal year accounts.

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South Korea recorded its largest-ever monthly current account surplus of $23.19 billion in February, according to Bank of Korea data. The figure was driven by a semiconductor upcycle and robust exports. It sharply exceeded January's $13.26 billion and surpassed the previous record of $18.7 billion set in December 2025.

The Bank of Korea reported that South Korea posted its largest-ever monthly current account surplus of $37.33 billion in March, driven by strong semiconductor exports.

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