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South Korea's NPS Accelerates Dollar Bond Issuance Amid Won Pressure
South Korea’s government has made a crucial strategic decision: authorizing the National Pension Service (NPS) to issue dollar-denominated bonds before the end of 2025. According to Jin10 reports, this move represents a significant shift in the funding policy of Asia’s largest pension fund, aiming to strengthen its position amid increasing currency market volatility.
This initiative marks the first time a high-ranking government official, Seuran Lee, First Vice Minister of Health and Welfare, has publicly commented on this unprecedented plan. The main goal is to diversify the NPS’s sources of funding, which has been pressured by increasingly aggressive currency fluctuations in the region.
Won Crisis Spurs NPS Diversification Strategy
The South Korean won has experienced a significant depreciation that has directly impacted the National Pension Service’s asset management. Since mid-2025, the local currency has lost approximately 7% of its value against the US dollar, forcing the NPS, the third-largest pension fund in the world, to implement defensive measures in its currency operations.
The sustained weakness of the won has added pressure on the financial system. The fund has had to sell dollars in the currency futures markets to contain depreciation and maintain some stability in the exchange rate. This scenario complicates South Korea’s long-term investment plans, particularly the ambitious initiative to channel $350 billion into U.S. industries under a bilateral trade agreement with Washington.
Concerns about potential capital outflows that could accelerate the local currency’s weakening have made this situation a complex dilemma for Seoul’s economic policymakers.
Official Coordination to Stabilize Financial Markets
In response, key players in South Korea’s financial system have agreed to intensify their coordination. The Ministry of Health and Welfare, the NPS, the Ministry of Finance, and the Bank of Korea will hold a joint formal meeting to serve as a quadripartite consultative body.
This institutional dialogue mechanism aims to comprehensively address the stability challenges facing the local financial market. The measure reflects official recognition that volatility issues require a coordinated response among multiple authorities and funds.
Global Implications of the World’s Largest Pension Fund
The issuance of dollar bonds by the NPS is not merely a technical financing move. It represents a response from the third-largest pension fund in the world to the realities of contemporary global markets, where exchange rate volatility and capital outflows cross borders rapidly.
The NPS’s decision to diversify its currency portfolio through foreign currency-denominated instruments underscores how massive pension funds must continually adapt to macroeconomic uncertainty environments. This initiative also exemplifies how a country’s monetary stabilization policies are intertwined with the investment strategies of its leading institutional funds.