I am watching Korea like a hawk... worried that we will have a Asian Crisis Redux which this time will start in Korea...

The won is in freefall against the USD and at the same range when IMF had to step in back in 98. Not good....
Published October 25, 2008
Ghost of Bear Stearns haunts Korean economy
Seoul must act boldly, show investors a crisis isn't imminentBy WILLIAM PESEK JR
BLOOMBERG COLUMNIST
SOUTH Korea has become the Bear Stearns economy. Just as excessive gloom on the part of pundits accelerated the demise of the 85-year-old investment bank, a bubble in negativity is causing a run on Korea. Bets that Asia's fourth-biggest economy is headed for a 1997-like crash risk becoming a self-fulfilling prophesy. A key problem is that banks are again making the pre-1997 mistake of borrowing in short maturities and in foreign currencies. This isn't a blame-the-media column. Bear Stearns Cos got in over its head with risky trades that threatened the firm with bankruptcy. There's still something to be said about how unsubstantiated rumours and speculation zooming around cyberspace hastened its collapse.
Korea isn't there yet, and there's ample reason to think it will avoid such a fate. Markets aren't so sure and Korea is under attack - even though officials in Seoul make a valid case for the economy's health.
'We are a lot better equipped than 10 years ago,' Jun Kwang Woo, chairman of Korea's Financial Services Commission, told Bloomberg News on Tuesday.
On top of steps already taken - pledging US$130 billion to support banks, tossing a US$6 billion lifeline to the construction industry, and fiscal and monetary stimulus - Korea is in the 'most comfortable position' to implement additional economy-boosting efforts, Mr Jun said. Korea's policy steps so far have won the support of the three main credit-rating companies. Standard & Poor's (S&P), which last week sparked the biggest one-day drop in the won since 1997 by placing Korea's five biggest banks on review for a downgrade, called the bank plan 'swift and broad'.
It's worth accentuating the positive. Korean companies have become more competitive since the late 1990s and banks' capital and asset quality are reasonable. The nation's debt ratio is near the lowest among major economies. Korea has US$240 billion of currency reserves. 'Fears of a balance of payments or banking crisis are overdone,' Paul Gruenwald, Singapore-based economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd, said in a research report on Wednesday.
It's true that Korea, like many other emerging-market economies, faces sizeable challenges as credit markets seize up. There also are vulnerabilities specific to Korea. 'These are bounded and not of a magnitude that warrant the doom-and-gloom commentary and pricing we are currently witnessing,' Mr Gruenwald said.
What's striking is how investors seem to have singled out Korea as the riskiest investment-grade economy in Asia. And in this interconnected, real-time world of ours, the more people chatter about another 'IMF crisis' in Korea, the more one becomes possible. Korea has made substantial progress since accepting a humiliating US$57 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund in 1997. President Lee Myung Bak has been reassuring investors that Korea can ride out the worsening global storm.
A key problem is that banks are again making the pre-1997 mistake of borrowing in short maturities and in foreign currencies. As that realisation filtered through markets, Korea suffered a massive capital flight out of equities. Korea is a cautionary tale for Asia. If things get worse, capital will increasingly leave emerging markets in search of destinations deemed less risky.
Market turmoil is dominating boardrooms. A case in point was Samsung Electronics Co's decision this week to scrap a US$5.85 billion offer to buy SanDisk Corp, saying losses at the US company may worsen as a glut forces chipmakers to cut prices.
This is where the Bear Stearns dynamic comes into play.
First, hedge funds and speculators went after top-rated Wall Street firms; now, they are gunning for entire countries. With Iceland under their belt, Korea tops the list of next targets. Export-driven Korea has its vulnerabilities. As Daniel Soh, an economist at Forecast Pte in Singapore, put it: 'South Korea's economy is definitely heading down. The construction industry is a major worry. The economy will slow into a recession. It's happening all over the world.'
It's the last part of Mr Soh's comment that's most important.
The credit crisis is a global phenomenon and yet Korea is the Asian economy being punished the most. Some of this is attributable to negative news coverage. Isn't it possible that the more observers buzz hyperbolically about another Great Depression, the more likely consumers will internalise that risk and help bring it about? This is less about blaming the media than wondering why so many are negative about Korea for seemingly irrational reasons.
It stands to reason that investors would harbour concerns about Asia's emerging markets. After all, Thailand and Indonesia, both of which joined Korea in 1997 in accepting IMF bailouts, are taking their lumps.
Also, investors such as Kim Sung Kwang of Hanwha Investment Trust Management Co in Seoul have a point when they argue the 'government has been late in responding to market calls for such measures, which, once announced, don't go beyond what the market has already expected'.
There is more to be done and this is crunch time for President Lee, a former chief executive officer of several Hyundai Group affiliates. He needs to act boldly and convince investors that a crisis isn't imminent. Those bracing for the worst may want to give Korea the benefit of the doubt. -- Bloomberg