Biggest Export Jump Since 1986 Fuels Korea Recession Rebound
(Bloomberg) -- South Korea’s fastest exports growth in decades led a stronger-than-expected rebound from its pandemic-triggered recession, signaling a pickup in global trade amid rising virus waves in key markets.
Gross domestic product increased 1.9% in the three months through September from the prior quarter, the Bank of Korea reported Tuesday. Economists had forecast 1.3% growth, following two quarters of contraction.
The biggest jump in exports since 1986 led the rebound after a sharp decline in shipments the prior period as demand for memory chips and electronics increased from China and other major economies amid a shift to more work-and-study from home. The gains fueled investment in machines and transportation equipment needed to support manufacturing.
“This speaks to the resilience of a manufacturing powerhouse,” said economist Oh Jae-young at KB Securities. “South Korea’s manufacturing has remained unscathed from the pandemic, and now as developed economies themselves restart production, South Korea’s getting a boost.”
Korea’s Exports Recovery Continues Behind Holiday-linked Fall
The better-than-expected GDP result may have helped limit the decline of the South Korean won to 0.1% against the dollar Tuesday amid global risk-off sentiment and an attempt by authorities to warn against the currency’s recent rally. The nation’s 10-year bond yield rose 1 basis-point to 1.5%.
South Korea is recovering from recession in a stronger position than most developed nations, aided by its exports recovery, stimulus measures and its relatively successful containment of the coronavirus.
A late summer resurgence of the virus in South Korea that led to tighter social distancing rules has eased. The government resumed the distribution of discount coupons -- halted during the second virus wave -- to encourage spending, and is promoting an annual shopping event in early November to accelerate the recovery.
Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki, in a statement Tuesday after the GDP report, said the country has entered a recovery phase thanks to exports to major economies such as China and stronger demand for its tech products. He said the economy might have expanded in the mid- 2% range last quarter if not for the resurgence of the virus in August.
Bank of Korea Holds Key Rate as Virus Grip on Economy Eases
Exports increased 16% from the previous quarter, but the recovery remains vulnerable to disruptions in the U.S. and Europe, where the epidemic is worsening. Growing U.S.-China tensions and the outcome of the U.S. presidential election also add to uncertainties for South Korea.
“The rising second wave outbreak in developed-market economies is concerning,” economist Rory Green, at research firm TS Lombard said before the GDP announcement. He said South Korea could still benefit from a “Zoom boom” even if a new rounds of lockdowns took place.
Private sector analysts see GDP shrinking for the full-year for the first time since the late 1990s Asian financial crisis, despite a second-half recovery.
Construction investment weighed on the economy heavily in the third quarter, falling 7.8%, while private spending remained sluggish with a 0.1% slide. Compared with the same period last year, the economy shrank 1.3%.
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