 
  US dollar deposits at South Korean banks rise amidst outbreak
Outstanding dollar deposits at five local banks have reached $47b.
US dollar-denominated deposits at South Korean banks have risen nearly 30% since February, when the country’s coronavirus cases sharply rose, reports Yonhap.
Outstanding dollar deposits at five local banks reached $47b as of 11 June, industry data showed. This is 28% higher from the $36.6b recorded at the end of February.
A rise in the foreign currency deposits came as investors betted on a stronger US dollar amidst pandemic-caused economic uncertainties, the report noted. So far, the Korean won has dropped nearly 4% against the dollar.
Demand for the dollar deposits continues to rise, jumping $6.6b in March compared to the previous month.
 
						 
						 
						 
						![Lorem Ipsum [ABF 1]](https://cmg-qa.s3.ap-southeast-1.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/styles/exclusive_featured_article/public/2025-03/a_hand_pointing_to_a_futuristic_technology_5b87c9d0e3_1.png.webp?itok=2w0y1WhS) 
                                                           
                                                           
                                                          ![Cross Domain [Manu + SBR + ABF + ABR + FMCG + HBR + ]](https://cmg-qa.s3.ap-southeast-1.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/styles/exclusive_featured_article/public/2025-01/earth-3537401_1920_4.jpg.webp?itok=WaRpTJwE) 
                                                           
								 
								 
																					
											
																			 
																					
											
																			 
																					
											
																			 
																					
											
																			 
								 
						 
								 
						 
								 
								 
						 
						 
                