Illustration depicting South Korea's rising industrial output, retail sales, and facility investment in March, with factories, shoppers, construction, and upward charts.
Illustration depicting South Korea's rising industrial output, retail sales, and facility investment in March, with factories, shoppers, construction, and upward charts.
Immagine generata dall'IA

South Korea's industrial output, retail sales and facility investment rise in March

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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.

South Korea's industrial production edged up 0.3 percent in March, marking the second consecutive monthly increase, according to data from the Ministry of Data and Statistics released on April 30. Mining and manufacturing output, a key economic pillar, rose 0.3 percent, driven by automobiles, other transportation equipment and machinery. However, semiconductor production fell 8.1 percent due to a base effect following a 28.2 percent surge in February, despite continued global demand from the AI boom. Refined petroleum products dropped 6.3 percent amid the Middle East conflict that erupted in late February.

Retail sales, a gauge of private spending, rose 1.8 percent. Sales of semidurable goods such as clothing increased 0.3 percent, while durable goods including home appliances jumped 9.8 percent; nondurable goods like food and beverages fell 1.3 percent.

Facility investment gained 1.5 percent, supported by a 5.2 percent rise in spending on transportation equipment. "Despite the Middle East war, the overall trend in production remains intact," said Lee Doo-won, a ministry official, adding that effects are expected in April and May. He noted that consumption "appears to be bottoming out and beginning to recover" after three years of weakness.

Cosa dice la gente

Discussions on X primarily consist of news outlets reporting South Korea's first simultaneous month-on-month rises in industrial output, retail sales, and facility investment since September. Traders noted specific figures like industrial output +0.3% MoM and retail sales +1.8% MoM, slightly below expectations. Some users highlighted potential future economic impacts from the Middle East crisis.

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Vibrant illustration of South Korea's February industrial output surging 2.5%, fastest in over five years, with booming factories and rising investment graphs.
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South Korea's February industrial output rises 2.5%, fastest in over 5 years

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA

South Korea's industrial output rose 2.5% in February from the previous month, the fastest growth in five years and eight months. Government data showed retail sales unchanged while facility investment jumped 13.5%. The Middle East crisis has had minimal impact so far.

South Korea's real GDP jumped 1.7 percent in Q1 2026 from the prior quarter—the strongest growth in 5½ years—despite Middle East tensions, easily topping the Bank of Korea's 0.9 percent forecast on robust exports and steady domestic demand. Part of the rebound following 2025's modest 1% annual expansion (see prior article in series).

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South Korea's producer price index rose 1.6 percent in March from the previous month, the fastest pace in about four years, Bank of Korea data showed Wednesday. The surge was driven by higher petroleum and chemical product prices amid rising global oil costs. Year-on-year, prices climbed 4.1 percent, the quickest increase since February 2023.

South Korea's exports surged 50.4 percent year-on-year to $53.3 billion in the first 20 days of March, driven by strong semiconductor demand. Korea Customs Service data showed a trade surplus of $12.1 billion for the period.

Riportato dall'IA

South Korea's consumer prices rose 2.6 percent year-on-year in April, up from March's 2.2 percent and the fastest pace in 21 months, driven by soaring fuel costs from the ongoing Strait of Hormuz disruption. Government data confirmed the figures.

South Korean stocks opened sharply higher on March 24 amid hopes of easing Middle East tensions, following U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement of talks with Iran and a five-day postponement of strikes. The KOSPI index rose 4.25% at open, reaching 5,602.08, up 3.63%, after 15 minutes of trading.

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