# [WARNING] South Korean won tumbles to weakest level since 2009

*Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 8:13 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-04T08:13:01.526Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, financial, currency, energy-demand, asia, em-fx-stress
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/9373.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

---

**Summary**: The KRW has fallen to its lowest level vs the USD since 2009, signaling acute FX stress in a key Asian manufacturing and importing economy. The move raises the risk of policy intervention and has implications for regional FX, EM credit, and energy demand expectations.

## Detail

1) What happened:
South Korea’s won has weakened to its lowest level against the US dollar since 2009. This is not a marginal move; it implies multi‑year extremes in FX valuation for a G20, export‑driven economy that is also a major importer of crude oil, LNG, and industrial commodities. No explicit capital controls or emergency measures have been announced yet, but this level of depreciation is typically associated with rising concerns about capital outflows, imported inflation, and potential policy response.

2) Supply/demand impact:
On the real‑economy side, a sharply weaker KRW raises local‑currency prices for imported energy (crude, products, LNG) and raw materials. In the short run, this tends to:
- Depress discretionary energy demand (especially transport fuels) as domestic prices adjust upward.
- Encourage some front‑loading of imports by corporates worried about further FX weakness but can ultimately pressure demand if the currency shock persists.
For industrial metals and petrochemicals, a weaker KRW can enhance Korea’s export competitiveness, marginally supporting export volumes but at the cost of domestic margin compression. Net oil/LNG demand impact is mildly negative if the weakness persists, as seen in prior KRW stress episodes.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- USD/KRW: bias to further KRW weakness or volatile two‑way trade around potential verbal/actual BoK or MoF intervention.
- Regional EM Asia FX (IDR, PHP, THB, MYR, TWD): likely under pressure via contagion and risk‑off.
- Asian credit spreads: mild widening, particularly Korean corporates and financials.
- Brent/WTI and LNG JKM: modestly negative demand signal at the margin; not a supply shock, but may cap upside, especially for JKM where Korea is a major buyer.
- Gold: mild safe‑haven support if this is read as part of broader EM FX stress.

4) Historical precedent:
In 2008–2009 and in the 2015 EM FX stress, sharp KRW depreciation coincided with wider risk‑off moves across Asian FX and equities, occasionally triggering Bank of Korea and MoF rhetoric and intervention. Those episodes produced >1% moves in regional FX and sometimes in oil and industrial metals via demand expectations.

5) Duration of impact:
If the move is driven mainly by dollar strength/rates rather than Korea‑specific balance‑sheet issues, impact may be transient and mean‑reverting over weeks. However, a sustained break to 2009‑era levels raises the risk of policy action (verbal intervention, FX smoothing, or macroprudential tweaks). For commodities, the effect is mostly on expectations of Asian demand growth over the next 1–3 months rather than an immediate volumetric shock.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** USD/KRW, KRW government bonds, KOSPI, Brent Crude, WTI Crude, JKM LNG, Gold, EM Asia FX basket (IDR, THB, PHP, MYR, TWD)
