South Korea FX Reserves Edge Higher in June

2026-07-02 21:06 By Isabela Couto 1 min. read

South Korea’s foreign exchange reserves rose to $427.4 billion at the end of June 2026 from $427.0 billion in May, marking a modest increase in the country’s external buffers.

The reserve stock remained heavily concentrated in securities, which accounted for $380.3 billion, or 89.0% of total holdings.

Deposits stood at $22.3 billion (5.2%), followed by Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) at $15.6 billion (3.7%), gold reserves at $4.8 billion (1.1%), and the country’s reserve position at the IMF at $4.3 billion (1.0%).



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South Korea FX Reserves Edge Higher in June
South Korea’s foreign exchange reserves rose to $427.4 billion at the end of June 2026 from $427.0 billion in May, marking a modest increase in the country’s external buffers. The reserve stock remained heavily concentrated in securities, which accounted for $380.3 billion, or 89.0% of total holdings. Deposits stood at $22.3 billion (5.2%), followed by Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) at $15.6 billion (3.7%), gold reserves at $4.8 billion (1.1%), and the country’s reserve position at the IMF at $4.3 billion (1.0%).
2026-07-02
South Korea FX Reserves Edge Lower in May
South Korea’s foreign exchange reserves edged down to $427.0 billion in May 2026 from $427.9 billion in April. Securities remained the largest component of the country's reserve assets, totaling $380.7 billion and accounting for 89.2% of the total. Deposits stood at $21.4 billion, representing 5.0% of reserves, while Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) amounted to $15.8 billion, or 3.7%. Gold holdings were valued at $4.8 billion, accounting for 1.1% of total reserves, and the country's reserve position at the International Monetary Fund totaled $4.4 billion, equivalent to 1.0% of overall holdings.
2026-06-03
South Korea Forex Reserves Rise in April
South Korea’s foreign exchange reserves rose to $427.9 billion at the end of April 2026 from $423.7 billion in the previous month. The increase came despite dollar injections to defend against high exchange rates, driven by investment returns and a higher dollar-converted value of other currency assets. Broken down by asset, securities such as government bonds and corporate bonds increased to $384.1 billion (vs $377.7 billion in March). Deposits fell to $18.8 billion (vs $21.1 billion), while Special Drawing Rights (SDR) with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rose to $15.8 billion (vs $15.6 billion). Gold stood at $4.8 billion, unchanged from the previous month, as it is recorded at the purchase price rather than market value, as well as the IMF reserve position, remaining at $4.5 billion. As of March, South Korea ranked 12th globally in foreign exchange reserves.
2026-05-06