USD/KRW closes at 1,545.2 won, up 13.2 won as won weakness deepens
The USD/KRW rate rose to 1,545.2 won at the 15:30 close, marking a clear weakening of the Korean won. The move adds pressure on import costs, dollar payments and household expenses tied to overseas spending. Korean equities and bonds are likely to remain sensitive to exchange-rate volatility.

The USD/KRW exchange rate climbed sharply in Seoul trading on June 29. At the 15:30 close, the rate stood at 1,545.2 won per dollar, up 13.2 won from the previous session. The move means that buying one dollar now requires 1,545.2 won, increasing the immediate won cost for importers, overseas payment users and companies with dollar liabilities.
Why the 1,545 won level matters
A 13.2 won increase has a direct accounting impact. A company settling $1 million would need about 13.2 million won more than in the previous session. For a $100 million payment, the added burden reaches about 1.32 billion won. This matters for Korean manufacturers that import energy, metals, grains and intermediate goods priced in dollars.
A weaker won can lift the won-denominated price of crude oil, gas and other commodities. That may feed into production costs, logistics expenses and, with a lag, consumer prices. For Korea, where energy imports are structurally important, exchange-rate moves often affect both inflation expectations and trade conditions.
Market and consumer impact
For the stock market, a higher exchange rate is mixed. Exporters may see a translation benefit in won terms, but foreign investors face greater currency-loss risk. Sectors with heavy import costs can react more sensitively. Bond investors also monitor the exchange rate because it can influence inflation expectations and monetary-policy pricing.
Households feel the move through overseas travel, tuition, online purchases and foreign-stock investment. Dollar assets may rise in won value, but new dollar purchases become more expensive. The key question now is whether USD/KRW stabilizes around the 1,545 won area or extends its rise. Companies and investors are expected to manage payment timing, hedging and cash flow more carefully while volatility remains elevated.
Key points
- The USD/KRW rate rose to 1,545.2 won at the 15:30 close, marking a clear weakening of the Korean won. The move adds pressure on import costs, dollar payments and household expenses tied to overseas spending. Korean equities and bonds are likely to remain sensitive to exchange-rate volatility.
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FAQ
What was the USD/KRW closing rate?
The USD/KRW rate closed at 1,545.2 won at 15:30 on June 29, up 13.2 won from the previous session.
Why does a higher USD/KRW rate matter for companies?
Companies paying in dollars need more won for the same dollar amount, which can raise import and financing costs.
How does this affect individuals?
Overseas travel, tuition, foreign online purchases and new dollar investments become more expensive in won terms.
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