Korea exports stay resilient against Omicron headwinds

 

Bloomberg

South Korea’s early trade figures offered signs that global demand remains robust in February even as the value of shipments rose by the smallest amount in almost a year.
Exports advanced 13.1% in the first 20 days of the month from the previous year, led by semiconductors and oil products, the customs office reported. Overall imports rose 12.9%, resulting in a trade deficit of $1.68 billion.
While the export gain was the smallest since March, the value of average daily shipments was only slightly down at 17.2% from the corresponding January figure, indicating that after the number of working days was factored in, the trend was largely unchanged.
That result points to the resilience of global commerce to the threat of the omicron variant of the coronavirus. Korea’s trade data are a barometer of global economic activity as the nation’s manufacturers are positioned widely across supply chains.
The latest report supports the Bank of Korea’s assessment that exports will keep underpinning the economy this year, as the bank persists along a path to policy normalisation.
While demand for South Korean goods remains solid in the face of virus concerns, inflationary pressures coupled with geopolitical risks have been squeezing the nation’s importers, who often supply the equipment and materials exporters need to assemble their products.
The pace of monthly export growth has been easing since May as a favourable base effect fades.

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