Dollar-Won Exchange Rate Faces 1,600 Risk as Strong Dollar Pressures Korea
The Korean won is under renewed pressure as several negative factors hit at once. A stronger dollar, weaker domestic growth sentiment and possible foreign fund outflows have brought the 1,600 won level into focus. A higher exchange rate directly affects import prices, corporate costs and Korean equity flows. The market will remain sensitive to U.S. rate expe

The upper range of the dollar-won exchange rate has reopened. Dollar strength, concerns over Korea’s economic slowdown and the risk of foreign capital outflows are combining to make 1,600 won per dollar a realistic stress scenario. The level is more than a round number. It affects import costs, overseas travel and education expenses, energy and commodity payments, and the supply-demand balance of Korean equities.
Why the Won Is Under Pressure
The key problem is that dollar strength and won weakness are moving together. When expectations for U.S. rate cuts weaken or demand for dollars rises, the won comes under pressure. If Korean growth concerns and risk aversion intensify, foreign investors can reduce exposure to won-denominated assets. More foreign selling in equities increases dollar demand and pushes the exchange-rate ceiling higher.
At 1,600 won, the cost shock becomes visible. Oil, natural gas, grains and industrial metals are settled in dollars, so Korean importers pay more in won. A 10,000 dollar import bill costs 14 million won at 1,400, but 16 million won at 1,600. That additional 2 million won can move into product prices and consumer inflation.
Impact on Inflation and Stocks
A weaker won is quickly felt by consumers. Refining, airlines, food, chemicals and utilities face higher dollar-based costs first. Overseas travel, tuition and online purchases also become more expensive in won terms. Higher import prices narrow the Bank of Korea’s policy room because easing becomes harder when the exchange rate and inflation are unstable.
Korean stocks will show sector divergence. Exporters with large dollar sales may benefit from higher won-translated revenue. Domestic names, airlines and companies dependent on imported raw materials face margin pressure. If foreign funds leave, volatility in the KOSPI and KOSDAQ can rise because overseas investors must factor in currency losses.
What Comes Next
The path of the exchange rate depends on U.S. rate expectations, global dollar demand, foreign flows into Korean stocks and bonds, and domestic economic data. The 1,600 level is not the base case; it is a stress zone that opens when negative factors persist. Still, the fact that markets are pricing the risk matters. Importers need to review hedging, while investors should avoid concentrating too heavily in either dollar or won assets. The won is likely to remain highly sensitive to policy signals and capital flows.
Key points
- The Korean won is under renewed pressure as several negative factors hit at once. A stronger dollar, weaker domestic growth sentiment and possible foreign fund outflows have brought the 1,600 won level into focus. A higher exchange rate directly affects import prices, corporate costs and Korean equity flows. The market will remain sensitive to U.S. rate expe
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FAQ
Why does 1,600 won per dollar matter?
It is a psychological stress level that can raise import prices, corporate costs and volatility in Korean financial markets.
Which sectors are most exposed?
Airlines, refiners, food, chemicals and utilities are more exposed because they rely heavily on dollar-priced imports.
What should investors monitor?
They should watch U.S. rate expectations, dollar strength, foreign stock and bond flows, and signals from the Bank of Korea.
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