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The $350 billion standoff: Inside the tense US-South Korea trade showdown

A high-powered South Korean delegation is engaged in a frantic and high-stakes diplomatic mission in Washington this week, a last-ditch effort to break a dangerous two-month deadlock that has stalled a landmark trade deal and left the nation’s powerhouse auto industry in a perilous state of limbo.

At the heart of the dispute is a colossal $350 billion investment pledge, a deal point that has become a major source of contention between the two allies.

The $350 billion standoff

The investment pledge is the centerpiece of a broader trade agreement that was supposed to cap U.S. duties on Korean goods at 15 percent. But with the details of the fund still fiercely debated, the promised tariff relief has not materialized.

The US has yet to lower its duties on South Korean cars from a punishing 25 percent, a delay that is putting the country’s automakers at a severe disadvantage against their Japanese rivals, who have already secured their own tariff relief.

The core of the impasse is a demand from President Donald Trump that Seoul’s massive investment package be made “upfront.” 

South Korea has forcefully pushed back, arguing that such a massive, immediate outflow of capital—an amount that represents more than 80 percent of its entire foreign exchange reserves—could dangerously weaken its currency and destabilize its economy.

The quest for a financial lifeline

In a bid to break the deadlock and protect its own financial stability, Seoul is now pushing for a crucial concession from Washington: the establishment of a currency swap arrangement.

Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol confirmed that he had personally conveyed to US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that making the investment upfront in cash was simply not feasible.

“Once an alternative structure is proposed, we’ll assess the associated FX demand and whether it can be managed within a range that ensures stability in Korea’s currency market,” Koo told reporters in a televised interview. 

Depending on how that changes, we’ll then determine whether a currency swap is necessary, whether it’s feasible, and if so, to what extent it should be pursued.

The Munhwa Ilbo newspaper has reported that Seoul is in discussions for an “Argentina-style” currency swap, an arrangement that would be funded by the US Treasury and would serve as a powerful backstop against any potential currency volatility.

Caught in the crossfire of a broader war

This bilateral high-wire act is being further complicated by the long and menacing shadow of the US-China trade war.

In a move that has added a new layer of tension to the talks, China has sanctioned the US unit of the South Korean shipbuilding giant Hanwha Ocean Co.

The move is a direct response to a US-South Korea shipbuilding initiative, and the US State Department has already condemned China’s action as an “irresponsible attempt” to disrupt the cooperation between the two allies.

With the clock ticking down to a major Asia-Pacific economic summit later this month, the pressure to find a breakthrough is immense.

For South Korea, a nation whose exports are equivalent to over 40 percent of its GDP, the stakes could not be higher.

The post The $350 billion standoff: Inside the tense US-South Korea trade showdown appeared first on Invezz

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