×

BOK hikes rates for first time in 3-1/2 years, signals more

By Thomson Reuters Jul 15, 2026 | 8:06 PM

By Cynthia Kim and Jihoon Lee

SEOUL, July 16 (Reuters) – South Korea’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time in three-and-a-half years on Thursday and flagged more to come, as brisk growth in Asia’s fourth-largest economy fanned inflation risks.

The seven-member ​monetary policy board at the Bank of Korea voted to raise the seven-day repurchase ‌rate by 25 basis points to 2.75% to stabilise a slumping won and counter persistent inflationary pressure.

In a statement, the bank also said the economic growth rate for South Korea is expected to “considerably exceed” the bank’s May forecast of 2.6%, while inflation will remain high for “a considerable time.”

“With developments across all three areas — growth, inflation, and financial stability — ‌supporting ​the need for an interest rate hike, it was judged appropriate ⁠to raise rates at this meeting,” ⁠Governor Shin Hyun Song said in a news conference in Seoul.

“Unlike major countries with weak economic recoveries, demand-side inflationary pressures are expected to gradually increase as the impact of the semiconductor boom spills over into domestic demand.”

The dollar-won rate remained muted on the widely expected decision. The ​benchmark KOSPI was off 6.2% as of 0318 GMT, mostly due to renewed selling in chipmakers’ stocks. The three-year government bond yield edged down slightly to 3.862%.

The economy has been rebounding faster ⁠than expected this year, thanks to a boom in ⁠semiconductor exports and investment, even as the local currency remains pressured, with the ​won weakening 3.4% against the greenback.

Gross domestic product expanded 1.8% in the first quarter, the fastest pace ​in nearly six years, prompting the government to raise growth forecasts to a five-year ‌high of 3.0% for this year on the back of a global semiconductor boom.

“(Shin) was remarkably clear. Usually when officials say they are data-dependent, they speak in general terms, but he gave two specific indicators to watch — second quarter GDP and July inflation data,” said Ahn Jae-kyun, an analyst at Korea ⁠Investment Securities, who expects the BOK to raise rates again in the fourth quarter.

“By clarifying exactly what to monitor and signaling that the door remains open for back-to-back hikes, those comments helped alleviate market ⁠uncertainty (about the policy path).”

The rate hike ‌aligns the BOK closely with the central bank in neighbouring Japan, which ⁠recently raised its own benchmark rate to a 31-year high.

Central banks in ​Australia, New ‌Zealand, Indonesia and the Philippines have already tightened their monetary policies.

With the ​headline inflation ⁠figure at a 2-1/2-year high in South Korea, a majority of analysts see the BOK delivering at least one more rate hike before the end of this year to take the policy rate to 3.00%.

Median forecasts showed the BOK would raise its key rate to 3.25% in the first quarter of 2027 and keep it there until at least the end of next year.

(Reporting by Cynthia Kim and Jihoon Lee; ​Editing by Sam Holmes)