(Bloomberg) -- South Korea’s export slump slowed in July, aided by the economic recovery in China and resilient demand for semiconductors.
Overseas shipments fell 7% from a year earlier, the trade ministry said Saturday, compared with economists forecast of an 8.3% decline. Exports to China rose 2.5% while semiconductor shipments increased 5.6%.
The contraction was smaller than previous months and comes on the back of China’s accelerating recovery and a further reopening of major markets. The data add evidence that South Korea’s trade-dependent economy has passed the worst of the pandemic, but a full recovery hinges on global virus developments.
South Korea releases its trade report earlier than most countries, helping investors gauge the health of the global economy.
Key Insights
- Exports were the largest drag on the South Korean economy in the second quarter, pulling the country into a technical recession. Recovery momentum is building, with industrial production in June beating estimates, while retail sales bounced back to pre-virus levels.
- The government expects exports to fall 8% this year. Still, some South Korean businesses such as memory chip and computer-device manufacturers have benefited from the pandemic-driven practices of working and learning from home.
- The key risk to global trade outlook is a flare-up of the virus, which has forced major economies like Australia and the U.K. to reimpose lockdowns. Even if a vaccine is developed, it would take a considerable time before it is universally available, meaning the global recovery will be gradual and uneven.
- The rekindling of tensions between the U.S. and China is a threat to South Korean exports, because it sells intermediate goods that Chinese firms use to assemble products that are then shipped across the world.
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- Imports declined 12% from a year earlier in July, leaving a trade surplus of $4.27 billion.
- South Korea’s average daily shipments, which take into account the difference in the number of working days, dropped 7% in the month. July this year had the same number of working days as July 2019.
- Automobile shipments decreased 4.2%, while exports of phones and other wireless communication devices rose 4.5%. Computer sales increased 77% and health-care exports jumped 47%.
- Overall exports to the U.S. climbed 7.7%, while those to Japan decreased 21.5% and those to the European Union fell 11.1%.
©2020 Bloomberg L.P.