South Korea exports rise for seventh month on growing chip demand

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[May 01, 2024]  SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's exports rose for a seventh straight month in April, trade data showed on Wednesday, as strong demand for chips continued to lead growth while automobile sales and U.S. shipments climbed to record highs. 

A truck carrying a shipping container travels past cranes at Pyeongtaek port in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, July 9, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

Overseas sales by Asia's fourth-largest economy rose 13.8% from the same month a year earlier to $56.26 billion, a bit higher than a rise of 13.7% tipped in a Reuters survey of economists.

It came after a 3.1% rise in the prior month, which was the slowest in the current run of gains that started in October.

Finance minister Choi Sang-mok said the data confirmed that an economic recovery was continuing, after the trade-reliant economy grew in the first quarter at the fastest pace in more than two years, beating estimates.

Exports of chips grew for a sixth consecutive month, rising 56.1%, along with gains across IT products, while sales of automobiles climbed 10.3% to post the highest-ever monthly export value of $6.79 billion.

By destination, exports to the United States extended gains for a ninth straight month, rising 24.3% to a record high of $11.4 billion, and China-bound shipments jumped 9.9%, sharply up from a 0.4% rise in the prior month.

Imports rose 5.4% in April to $54.73 billion, after a 12.3% drop in March and compared with a gain of 6.2% expected by economists. It was the first increase since February 2023.

As a result, the country posted a trade surplus of $1.53 billion in April, narrower than a $4.29 billion surplus in March.

(Reporting by Jihoon Lee; Editing by Sam Holmes)

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