Headline: Won slides back towards 1,540 per dollar
TOP STORY
A softer won helps Korean exporters on price but raises the bar for the large US capital commitments Korean firms have pledged. Expectations that the Bank of Korea will stay tighter for longer are limiting the downside.
SECTOR WATCH
Potential chip tariffs remain the central exposure for Samsung and SK Hynix memory. Autos have relief at 15 percent, supporting Hyundai's US pricing.
KOREAN CORPORATE TRACKER
Standing domestic capital map under the current tariff deal: Samsung 450 trillion won (about 310 billion dollars) over five years, including a new Pyeongtaek line; Hyundai 125 trillion won (about 86 billion dollars) 2026-2030 for R&D, AI, robotics, and autonomy; SK at least 128 trillion won (about 88 billion dollars) through 2028, AI-focused.
BURGER WATCH
Shake Shack opened the year in 2026 with a K-Shack menu, including K-Shack Fried Chicken Bites and a first-ever spicy caramel shake, leaning into Korean flavors stateside. Mom's Touch keeps expanding drive-throughs as the value-burger trend pressures premium K-burger players.
BCW TAKE
A weaker won will front-load US investment while Korea quietly presses Washington for semiconductor tariff parity. Clients with Korea exposure should plan for currency and tariff volatility through the summer.
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