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Bank of Korea Governor Nominee Vows to Respond to Excessive Won Weakness

SEOUL, April 13 (Reuters) - The Bank of Korea's governor nominee said it would be necessary to ​respond properly if the won fell excessively, in written remarks he ‌submitted on Monday to parliament ahead of a parliamentary confirmation hearing on Wednesday.

"Although dollar-won exchange rates recently fell slightly to the ​1,480 level, their increases since the Middle East ​war had been bigger than other currencies and ⁠uncertainty is still high, so we will closely monitor ​foreign exchange market conditions," Shin Hyun-song said.

On Monday, the ​won weakened as much as 1.1% to 1,499.7 per dollar, after talks between the U.S. and Iran over the weekend failed to reach ​a deal to end the war.

Shin said it ​was not necessary to worry about the level of dollar-won rates ‌itself, ⁠given stable liquidity conditions, while he declined to answer a lawmaker's question on the outlook for exchange rates.

On a separate question regarding monetary policy, Shin said increased inflation ​pressure from ​the Middle East ⁠conflict would be considered most in future policy decisions, according to a report ​by the Yonhap News Agency.

Meanwhile, downward pressure on ​growth ⁠is somewhat being mitigated by robust semiconductor exports and an extra budget, Shin said.

The central bank last week kept its policy interest ⁠rate ​steady and warned of a ​highly uncertain path, as it flagged a downgrade in its growth forecasts ​and higher inflation projections.

Reporting by Jihoon Lee Editing by Ed Davies

Source: Reuters


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