South Korea reported a trade surplus in June for the first time in 16 months, but its outbound shipments fell for the ninth consecutive month due mainly to weak demand for semiconductors, the industry ministry said Saturday.
Outbound shipments fell 6 percent on-year to $54.24 billion last month, according to the data compiled by the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy.
The decline came as exports of semiconductors, the country's key export item, sank 28 percent on falling demand and a drop in chip prices.
But June saw the smallest on-year export decline so far this year, possibly indicating that the country's exports may rebound in the second half of the year.
The nation's outbound shipments sank 15.2 percent in May following a 14.4 percent decline the previous month.
Exports have marked an on-year drop since October last year amid aggressive monetary tightening by major economies to curb high inflation and an economic slowdown. It is also the first time since 2020 that exports have declined for nine months in a row.
Imports fell 11.7 percent on-year to $53.11 billion in June, as energy imports went down 27.3 percent on-year, the ministry said. South Korea depends on imports for most of its energy needs.
Accordingly, the country logged a trade surplus of $1.13 billion last month, ending a 15-month shortfall.
Imports exceeded exports in South Korea from March 2022 through May 2023 on high energy prices, and it is the longest trade deficit the country has suffered since 1997.
The accumulated trade deficit in the January-June period came to $26.21 billion, the data showed.
By sector, exports of chips dropped 28 percent on-year, and the country's chip sales have logged an on-year decline since August last year.
But the exports by value in June reached the highest monthly level of $8.9 billion so far this year, the data showed.
Exports of petroleum products and petrochemicals also dived 40.9 percent and 22 percent on-year, respectively, in June on falling prices.
But car exports spiked 58.3 percent on-year last month, and global sales of ships soared 98.6 percent. Overseas shipments of secondary batteries also climbed 16.3 percent in June.
By destination, shipments to China, the top trading partner, fell 19 percent on a global economic slowdown, though the shipments surpassed the $10 billion level for the second month in a row.
South Korea releases its full monthly export data on the first day of every month. (Yonhap)