If you want to invest in Korean stocks, there is the Lyxor Korea listed on the SGX or the Lyxor Korea 2813 listed in HK.
Since Warren Buffett mentioned that Korean shares are cheap, I should start putting Korea on my watchlist now. However, I'm concerned that Korea will be hit by the high oil prices and the slowdown in the US..
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South Korea Keeps Key Rate at 5% on Inflation Concern
May 8 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of Korea kept interest rates unchanged at the highest in almost seven years, saying rising commodity prices and a declining currency are stoking inflation. Bonds declined.
Governor Lee Seong Tae and his board left the seven-day repurchase rate at 5 percent in Seoul today, as predicted by 13 of 20 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Seven forecast a cut.
Asian policy makers are battling to balance fallout from the global financial crisis against record prices for food and fuel that have stoked inflation across the region. Indonesia unexpectedly raised borrowing costs this week, while South Korea and Japan have refrained from following U.S., English and Canadian central bankers in cutting rates this year as growth slows.
``The inflation risk is too great to ignore,'' said Oh Suk Tae, an economist at Citibank Korea Inc. in Seoul. ``Policy makers need more time to justify a rate cut.''
Crude oil reached a record $123.93 a barrel in New York yesterday. Global prices for corn, wheat and soybeans have climbed to all-time highs in 2008, and rice prices have more than doubled in the past year.
Rising food and energy costs propelled South Korea's inflation to a four-year high of 4.1 percent in April, breaching the central bank's target for the sixth straight month. Consumer prices in Singapore are rising at the fastest pace in a quarter century and China's inflation rate is close to an 11-year high.
Target Breach
Oil prices, coupled with a weaker won, ``are contributing a lot to inflation, which remains above our target ceiling of 3.5 percent,'' Governor Lee told reporters today. ``Inflation will likely remain above the target ceiling for months ahead.''
The yield on the five-year South Korean government bond climbed 16 basis points to 5.21 percent. The Kospi index of shares slipped 0.3 percent to 1,848.22 at 2:26 p.m. in Seoul.
Adding to the central bank's inflation concerns, the Korean won has dropped 12 percent this year, the most among the world's 16 most active currencies. The won fell 2.3 percent to 1,049.50 against the dollar today, the lowest level since November 2005.
A weaker won has boosted the cost of imported goods, exacerbating the increases in commodity prices. South Korea is the world's fifth-largest importer of crude oil.
``The dilemma between growth and inflation has heightened even further,'' said Kwon Young Sun, an economist at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong. ``The Bank of Korea's policy outlook looks heavily dependent on oil prices and the currency, the key factors for the near-term inflation outlook.''
Government Pressure
Lee has resisted pressure from the government to lower borrowing costs as the U.S. financial crisis cools the global expansion. South Korea's economy grew at the slowest quarterly pace in more than three years in the first three months of 2008 as consumers and companies curtailed spending.
Inflation in South Korea is ``inevitable'' as global food and energy costs climb, and the government should pursue policies to drive growth, Finance Minister Kang Man Soo said in an interview in Madrid this week.
The government is targeting growth of 6 percent this year after the economy advanced 5 percent in 2007.
``The political pressure is on for a cut of 25 basis points to help the economy hit an ambitious growth target,'' said Frederic Neumann, an economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong.
Lee said today that the Bank of Korea will forecast the 2008 economic growth rate slowing to 4.5 percent or below when it releases updated estimates in July. The bank in December predicted the economy would expand 4.7 percent this year.
Exports Climb
As well as stoking inflation, the won's drop versus the dollar this year has helped Samsung Electronics Co. and other exporters by making their products cheaper abroad and increasing the value of their overseas sales translated into the local currency.
Exports jumped 27 percent in April from a year earlier. Overseas shipments were the engine of more than half of the economy's 0.7 percent expansion in the first quarter.
``The case for any easing at all for the remainder of the year is entirely data dependent,'' Neumann said. ``Rate cuts this year in Korea? No longer a slam dunk.''
Source: Bloomberg