Seoul shares dip on rate hold, record oil prices
(Updates to mid-morning)
SEOUL, May 8 (Reuters) - Seoul shares traded lower on Thursday after the Bank of Korea dashed rate cut hopes by keeping its key interest rate unchanged, while record high oil prices added to worries about consumer sentiment.
The market gave a muted reaction to the central bank's decision to keep its key rate unchanged at 5.0 percent for the ninth straight month in May, with the Korea Composite Stock Price Index down 0.32 percent to 1,848.02 points as of 0211 GMT, paring opening losses of more than one percent.
The KOSPI is still up some 20 percent from its mid-March low, but analysts said it was to likely face further pressure in the weeks ahead.
"I do not think the Bank of Korea will lower rates anytime soon, so I'm ruling out a June rate cut here, unless we see some dramatic decline in oil prices, for example," said Goh You-sun, an economist at Daewoo Securities.
"The index is taking a breather from the latest rally, and concerns about the economy and inflation have revived on the back of record high oil prices," said Lee Sun-yeob, a market analyst at Goodmorning Shinhan Securities.
Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), the world's top memory chip
maker and South Korea's largest company by market capitalisation,
fell 2.02 percent to 726,000 won after steep gains that lifted it
to a historical high on Tuesday.
"Its recent gains have been substantial, and with a May option contract expiry today, it's bound to be volatile as it comes under selling pressure," said Kim Young-june, an analyst at Kyobo Securities.
"But the chipmaker's fundamentals remain solid, with DRAM prices gradually recovering since bottoming out in the first quarter," Kim added.
Financials such as Kookmin Bank 060000.KS also declined, tracking their Wall Street peers' fall overnight after comments by a U.S. Federal Reserve banker that the U.S. must be ready to raise interest rates given inflationary pressures.[ID:nN07298593]
Kookmin fell 1.46 percent to 67,300 won and Shinhan Financial
Group (055550.KS) declined 1.58 percent to 56,000 won.
Steel makers fell on the back of the latest raw material price hikes, and after speculation that China will give in to Australian demands in iron ore price negotiations that could see a price rise of up to 85 percent, which sent Chinese steel shares down on Thursday. [ID:nSYD37]
"Chinese steel shares' fall and worries about raw material price hikes are pressuring South Korean steel shares," said Lee Chang-mok, an analyst at Woori Investment & Securities.
POSCO (005490.KS) fell 0.39 percent to 512,000 won and Hyundai Steel (004020.KS) slid 0.24 percent to 82,200 won.
Retailers such as Lotte Shopping Co Ltd (023530.KS) fell on
concerns record oil prices may dampen consumer spending.
Lotte Shopping dropped 1.78 percent to 358,500 won and
Shinsegae (004170.KS) slipped 1.23 percent to 642,000 won.
($1=1032.5 Won)
(Reporting by Park Jung-youn; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)
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