Reuters    •   5 min read

South Korea to scrutinise US-Japan trade deal as officials fly to Washington

WHAT'S THE STORY?

By Joyce Lee and Hyunjoo Jin

SEOUL (Reuters) -Seoul will take a close look at the terms of a U.S.-Japan trade deal, South Korea's industry minister said on Wednesday, holding out the prospect of greater cooperation in the energy and industrial sectors ahead of key trade talks in Washington.

Japan competes with South Korea in areas such as autos and steel, so Tokyo's trade deal will pile pressure on Seoul to reach a similar level of 15%, or better, by an August 1 deadline to avert reciprocal U.S. tariffs

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of 25%.

The new finance ministry and the top trade envoy of Asia's fourth-biggest economy are set for high-level trade talks with U.S. counterparts in Washington on Friday.

"Investors see the Japan-U.S. deal as a benchmark for the Korean deal," said Kim Sung-rae, an analyst at Hanwha Investment & Securities, adding, "The deal would put pressure on Korean negotiators to come up with a similar, or better, deal."

South Korea's benchmark KOSPI index edged down 0.3% on Wednesday, but shares in automakers and suppliers rallied after the Japan-U.S. deal. Hyundai Motor rose 6.8% and Kia jumped 6.4%.

New President Lee Jae Myung has said Seoul wanted to avoid a comparative disadvantage with other countries in trade deals.

"It will be difficult for South Korea to have U.S. tariff rates lower than 15% on Japan and 10% on Britain," said Kim Yong-jin, a management professor at Sogang University.

Seoul needed to import more farm goods and energy, as well as boost investments, as Japan had done to reach a similar outcome, he added.

South Korea will exclude the opening-up of its rice and beef markets as a bargaining chip in the Washington talks, instead considering more U.S. imports of crops for fuel, such as corn for bioethanol, the Yonhap News Agency said.

"We will make an all-out effort to produce a positive sum result that will allow Korea-U.S. industrial and energy cooperation to be upgraded to the next level," Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan said in a statement.

Since the result could have a significant economic impact, South Korea would respond thoroughly while closely considering the sensitivity of its industry, he added.

He will meet U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Energy Secretary Chris Wright, among others, he told reporters before boarding a plane to Washington for the talks.

In a post on Truth Social, U.S. President Donald Trump said Japan would boost market access for American producers of cars, trucks, rice and certain agricultural products, among others.

The deal's tariff of 15% on all Japanese imports is down from a proposed 25%, with Trump adding that it would include $550 billion of Japanese investments in the United States.

Last week, South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper said the United States had asked Seoul in talks this month to set up a large-scale investment fund to support the reconstruction of its manufacturing industry, without identifying a clear source.

(Reporting by Joyce Lee, Hyunjoo Jin and Jihoon Lee Editing by Ed Davies and Clarence Fernandez)

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