• January 19, 2026
  • Stella
  • 0

South Korea’s planned investment of US$350 billion in strategic US sectors under a trade deal is unlikely to kick off in the first half of 2026, Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said.

This means the weak won currency should not face new major dollar outflows.

The allies agreed to cap annual dollar investment outflows at US$20 billion, under a November trade deal that cut US President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imports from South Korea, which agreed in turn to invest US$350 billion in strategic US sectors.

“It’s unlikely,” Koo told Reuters on Friday (Jan 16), when asked if the investment could begin in the first half of this year.

“Even if a nuclear power plant gets selected, for example, there will be processes to follow, such as finding a location, designing it and building them, so the initial outflows could be much smaller than that,” he added.

He was referring to an annual cap of US$20 billion on outflows agreed by the two countries.

The slumping won is a worry for Seoul officials planning for such large outflows, as it nears levels unseen since the global financial crisis from 2007 to 2009, even though exports are humming and the stock market jumped 76 per cent in 2025.

Koo warned traders not to test the resolve of authorities on the won which, on Friday, was hovering near 16-year lows of 1,473.8 won (S$1.29) to the US dollar, after weakening by more than 2 per cent this year.

Koo said the government planned to implement the investment package as soon as possible.

It would ask parliament to start reviewing a bill proposed in 2025 to set up a special fund for the package from February, he said, but added that uncertainty over an expected US court ruling on Trump’s tariffs could affect the process.

No specific projects have yet been agreed under the deal, but they could involve nuclear power plants as flagged by US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, he said.

The government’s efforts to rein in the won have failed to sway the currency very far from the key psychological level of 1,500 won to the US dollar.

Source: Businesstimes

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *