South Korea's CPI On Track to Moderate as Policy Shift Looms

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Market observers are closely tracking South Korea’s inflation trajectory heading into the final months of 2025, with economists anticipating a meaningful shift in the Bank of Korea’s monetary stance. Recent analysis from major financial institutions suggests the central bank is preparing to ease policy constraints to reinvigorate economic growth as price pressures continue their gradual decline.

Latest forecasts point to South Korea’s CPI rising 1.9% year-on-year in August, representing a notable pullback from July’s 2.1% reading. This deceleration reflects a combination of favorable and challenging factors playing out simultaneously across the economy. Crude oil prices have retreated from their peaks, providing welcome relief to broader inflationary pressures. Counterbalancing this benefit, however, are headwinds from surging agricultural commodity costs that continue to pressure consumer prices.

The inflation landscape narrowing around target levels

Looking ahead to year-end, strategists at major securities firms expect South Korea’s inflation rate to gravitate toward the Bank of Korea’s official 2% target by the close of 2025. This convergence suggests the central bank’s prior tightening measures are delivering their intended effect. The month-on-month CPI expansion is projected at a modest 0.2% for August, essentially flat relative to July’s performance and well-contained.

The Bank of Korea appears positioned to respond to these improving conditions. With inflation gradually trending toward its comfort zone, policymakers gain room to pivot toward accommodative measures designed to lift economic activity. This potential policy relaxation would align with the central bank’s dual mandate of price stability and growth support.

Official inflation data will be released next Tuesday, providing the market with concrete figures to assess the path forward. Until then, investors and analysts remain attuned to any signals about the central bank’s appetite for policy adjustments.

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