South Korea exports accelerate

TheStar Wed, Mar 02, 2022 08:50am - 2 years View Original


Going strong: A worker inspects a shipment as a truck carrying a container drives through the Busan Port Terminal in South Korea. Semiconductors, the nation’s top export, jumped 24% year-on-year in February. — Bloomberg

SEOUL: South Korea’s trade sector swung back to a surplus in February from a record deficit a month earlier, powered by stronger-than-expected growth in exports, but the recovery faces some risks from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Exports in February expanded 20.6% from a year earlier to U$53.91bil (RM226bil), trade ministry data showed yesterday.

This beat the forecast for 18.2% growth in a Reuters’ poll and faster than the 15.2% gain in January.

It also marked the 16th straight month of expansion.

“Continued rise in oil prices and high semiconductor prices boosted exports growth, adding to the solid exports volume,” said Kim Ye-in, an analyst at Korea Investment & Securities.

A breakdown by items showed sales of semiconductors, the nation’s top export, jumped 24% year-on-year, while those for petrochemicals, oil and steel products also surged 24.7%, 66.2% and 40.1%, respectively.

By destination, exports to China, South Korea’s biggest trading partner, gained 16%, and those to the United States and the European Union rose 20.9% and 8.6%, respectively.

Imports, meanwhile, jumped 25.1% in February to US$53.07bil (RM223bil), with those of crude oil, gas and coal totalling US$12.5bil (RM52bil).

That brought the trade balance to a US$0.84bil (RM3.53bil) surplus, after a record US$4.83bil (RM20bil) deficit in January.

However, the outlook for the trade balance and exports may depend on the Ukraine crisis with a raft of sanctions imposed on Russia for its invasion of its neighbour further disrupting global supply chains.

“Price pressure on energy products will continue for the time being, with the import value of crude oil seen growing at a solid pace,” said Kim Yeon-jin, an analyst at Eugene Investment & Securities.

Western countries decided to block some Russian banks from the SWIFT international payments system, which has become the principal mechanism to finance international trade, with South Korea on Monday joining the sanctions by tightening export controls.

Among the strategic items that could be controlled are supplies of electronics, semiconductors, computers, information and communications, sensors and lasers, navigation and avionics, and marine and aerospace equipment.

South Korean financial markets were closed yesterday due to a public holiday. —Reuters

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