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BoK Minutes: Cautious on Rates amid War Uncertainty

SEOUL, April 28 (Reuters) - South Korea's monetary policy ​board said a cautious, wait-and-see approach is ‌appropriate for now as heightened uncertainty from the Iran war warrants more monitoring of its impact on ​growth and inflation, minutes from central ​bank's previous meeting showed on Tuesday.

"While the ⁠focus has been on financial stability until ​the beginning of the year, I believe we ​should shift our focus to alleviating inflationary pressure for the time being," one member said.

The Bank of ​Korea's monetary policy board voted on April 10 ​to keep the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 2.50%, a ‌move ⁠anticipated by all 31 economists polled by Reuters.

The hold reflects the bind the BOK finds itself in, with the economy caught between ​growth headwinds ​and an ⁠inflationary energy shock that could emerge to complicate any policy tightening ​ahead.

Among 30 analysts polled, 26 expected ​no ⁠change to the benchmark rate through the end of this year. Three forecast the policy rate ⁠to ​rise to 2.75% by ​year-end, while one expected it to reach 3%.

Reporting by Cynthia ​Kim; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Jacqueline Wong

Source: Reuters


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