Exports rise 16.5 per cent during first 10 days of May on strong chip sales
South Korea's exports rose 16.5 per cent on-year in the first 10 days of May on robust global demand for semiconductors, data showed yesterday.
Outbound shipments reached US$16.81 billion in the April 1-10 period, compared with $14.43 billion tallied a year earlier, according to the data from the Korea Customs Service.
Per-day exports also advanced 16.5 per cent on-year to $2.59 billion.
Exports, a key economic growth engine, have been recovering since late last year after a yearlong downturn.
In April, exports expanded 13.8 per cent on-year to $56.2 billion, the seventh consecutive monthly gain, on the back of strong demand for semiconductors and vehicles.
Imports fell 6.7 per cent on-year to $17.4 billion during the May 1-10 period, resulting in a trade deficit of $600 million.
Strong sales of semiconductors led the overall export growth.
Chip exports jumped 52 per cent to $3.01 billion during the 10 days of this month.
Semiconductor exports accounted for 17.9 per cent of the country's total exports during the cited period, up 4.2 percentage points from a year earlier amid an industry cycle upturn.
Auto exports went up 8.9 per cent to $1.46 billion, and sales of petroleum products jumped 14.1 per cent to $1.62 billion.
Sales of steel products climbed 11.5 per cent to $1.31 billion, while those of automotive parts shed 2.5 per cent to $531 million.
By nation, shipments to China added 9.7 per cent to $3.51 billion, and exports to the United States grew 12.5 per cent to $2.86 billion.
Exports to the European Union rose 9.1 per cent to $1.75 billion, and those to Việt Nam soared 30.6 per cent to $1.71 billion.
Shipments to Japan increased 11.3 per cent to $856 million, and exports to Hong Kong surged 56.7 per cent to $616 million, the data showed.
The government expected exports to advance 8.5 per cent this year to reach a record high of over $700 billion.