name   천일그룹  tel   0231441001
date   2024-04-05 E-mail

  webmaster@chunilgroup.com
title   Exports rise for 6th straight month in March


South Korea''s exports moved up for the sixth consecutive month in
March on the back of the robust performance of chips, data showed
Monday.

Outbound shipments gained 3.1 percent on-year to $56.5 billion last
month, according to the data compiled by the Ministry of Trade,
Industry and Energy.

Imports decreased 12.3 percent on-year to $52.2 billion last month,
resulting in a trade surplus of $4.28 billion. South Korea has been
maintaining a trade surplus for 10 consecutive months.

By sector, exports of chips jumped 35.7 percent on-year in March to
$11.7 billion, growing for five consecutive months. It marked the
highest amount since $12.3 billion posted in June 2022.


The ministry attributed the growth to the rebound in memory chip
prices due to supply adjustments, alongside increased demand for
premium products like high bandwidth memory chips.

Exports of petroleum products climbed 3.1 percent to $4.62 billion
due to supply shortages, with those of ships more than doubling to
$2.13 billion on the back of the robust demand for container and LNG
carriers.

Outbound shipments of displays also shot up 16.2 percent to $1.42
billion on the back of the rising demand from the mobile industry.

Exports of automobiles, however, fell 5 percent to $6.16 billion due
to a base effect. Outbound shipments of cars had jumped 63.6 percent
on-year in March 2023.

Shipments of batteries fell 23 percent to $669 million as a decrease
in mineral costs led to lower export prices, the ministry said.

By destination, exports to China, the top trade partner for Asia''s
No. 4 economy, moved up 0.4 percent over the period to $10.5 billion
on the back of stronger demand for chip products.

Shipments to the United States also gained 11.6 percent to $10.9
billion on the back of higher demand for premium cars, such as SUVs,
rising for eight straight months.

Exports to the Southeast Asian region and the European Union fell 1.3
percent and 6.7 percent, respectively, over the period.

Exports, a key economic growth engine for South Korea, rebounded in
October after 13 months of an on-year decline. Outbound shipments
decreased 7.4 percent on-year in 2023 amid the sluggish performance
of chips coupled with global economic uncertainties.

"In the second quarter, the upward trajectory of exports,
particularly in sectors, such as ships and IT products like chips,
along with the robust performance of key items, such as automobiles
and machinery, is set to sustain the growth momentum and surplus
trend in exports," Industry Minister Ahn Duk-geun said in a
statement. (Yonhap)