Corporate direct financing rises 13 percent in April on bond sales

Corporate direct financing in South Korea rose 13.2 percent in April from the previous month to 22.62 trillion won, driven by higher bond sales.

Data from the Financial Supervisory Service showed that local companies raised 22.62 trillion won through stock and bond sales in April. This marked an increase of 2.63 trillion won, or 13.2 percent, from March.

Stock sales declined 6 percent to 413 billion won. Corporate bond sales, however, climbed 13.6 percent to 22.20 trillion won.

Outstanding corporate bonds stood at 745.28 trillion won at the end of April, down 0.3 percent from the prior month.

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Seoul stock traders celebrate KOSPI closing above 6,000 for first time since U.S.-Iran conflict, with rising charts and Seoul skyline.
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Seoul shares end above 6,000 for first time since U.S.-Iran conflict

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Seoul shares soared more than 2 percent on April 15 to close above 6,000 for the first time since the U.S.-Iran conflict erupted in late February. The Korean won strengthened against the U.S. dollar. Hopes for U.S.-Iran peace talks and Wall Street gains drove the rally.

South Korea's exports surged 49.4 percent year-on-year to $50.4 billion in the first 20 days of April, driven by robust semiconductor demand, Korea Customs Service data showed Tuesday. Imports rose 17.7 percent to $39.9 billion, yielding a $10.4 billion trade surplus.

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South Korea's industrial output, retail sales and facility investment all rose from a month earlier in March, official data showed on April 30. It marked the first time since September that all three indicators posted on-month growth. A ministry official said the Middle East crisis has not yet impacted the economy.

Seoul shares ended flat on Friday as investors bought defense and shipbuilding stocks to offset declines in major tech shares amid Middle East tensions. The benchmark KOSPI edged down 0.18 point to close at 6,475.63. The South Korean won fell against the U.S. dollar.

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Seoul shares opened higher on Tuesday, propelled by Samsung Electronics' record first-quarter earnings. The benchmark KOSPI rose 2.47 percent to 5,584.76 in the first 15 minutes of trading. Strong demand for AI-related chips drove the profit surge.

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