Container terminals at the Port of Busan, South Korea (Courtesy of Yonhap) South Korea is likely to head for a recession for the first time in three years as exports of Asia’s fourth-largest economy in January dropped for four months amid weakening global demand, resulting in a record trade deficit.
Exports lost 16.6% to $46.3 billion last month from a year earlier, showed data from the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy on Wednesday. The drop was the largest since May 2020. The country’s overseas sales fell by a revised 9.6% in December 2022, 14.1% in November and 5.8% in October.
Imports dipped 2.6% to $59 billion, generating an all-time high trade shortfall of $12.7 billion.
“Sluggish exports were one of the main reasons for the GDP contraction last quarter and we expect this to continue for several more months,” said an ING Senior Economist Kang Min Joo in a note, adding the economy is forecast to shrink by a seasonally adjusted 0.2% in the current quarter from the previous three months.
The gloomy expectations caused investors to bet the central bank may end its policy tightening in the near term.
South Korean government bond yields fell across the board after the January exports data with the highly liquid three-year debt yield down 5.7 basis points to 3.268% on Wednesday morning, according to the Korea Financial Investment Association.
That could exacerbate the global semiconductor market condition, ING’s Kang said.
“This means that the large imbalance between supply and demand is unlikely to be corrected anytime soon and sector-wide inventory levels will continue to rise, resulting in further declines in unit memory chip prices.”
South Korea’s exports to China, the country’s largest overseas market, dropped 31.4% in January, extending its losing streak to an eighth consecutive month. Sales of semiconductors and petrochemical products to the world’s second-largest economy slid 46.6% and 22%, respectively.
Sales to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) also suffered a fourth month of decline, falling 19.8%, while shipments to the US, the world’s top economy, skidded 6.1%.
Write to Ji-Hoon Lee at lizi@hankyung.com Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.
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