Illustration depicting South Korea's Port of Busan with cargo ships exporting semiconductors amid record 29% export growth fueled by AI demand.
Illustration depicting South Korea's Port of Busan with cargo ships exporting semiconductors amid record 29% export growth fueled by AI demand.
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South Korea's February exports jump 29% to record high on chip demand

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South Korea's exports rose 29% year-on-year in February to $67.45 billion, marking the highest level ever for the month. The surge was driven by growing demand for semiconductors amid the AI boom. The trade surplus reached a record $15.51 billion.

South Korea's exports totaled $67.45 billion in February, a 29% increase from $54.2 billion a year earlier, according to data from the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources. This marked the highest figure ever for the month, achieved despite three fewer working days due to the Lunar New Year holiday falling in February 2026, unlike January 2025. Daily exports surged 49.3% to $3.55 billion, exceeding $3 billion for the first time. Exports have been growing year-on-year since June 2025, setting new monthly records for nine straight months.

Imports rose 7.5% to $51.94 billion, yielding a trade surplus of $15.51 billion—the largest in the country's history—and marking the 13th consecutive month of surplus. The export boom was led by semiconductors, which soared 160.8% to a record $25.16 billion, driven by rising memory chip prices from AI server demand. Semiconductor exports have topped $20 billion for the third consecutive month.

Wireless communication devices, including mobile phones, increased 12.7% to $1.47 billion, extending gains to four months. Computer exports jumped 221.6% to $2.56 billion, rising for the fifth straight month. However, auto exports fell 20.8% to $4.81 billion and parts declined 22.4% to $1.45 billion, attributed to fewer working days. Petroleum products dropped 3.9% to $3.73 billion due to lower global oil prices. Petrochemicals decreased 15.4% to $3.33 billion, and steel exports fell 7.8% to $2.36 billion, both affected by global oversupply and lower prices.

By destination, exports to the United States rose 29.9% to $12.85 billion, a February record, boosted by semiconductors and computers. Shipments to China increased 34.1% to $12.75 billion, led by semiconductors, computers, and petroleum. ASEAN exports grew 30.4% to $12.47 billion—the third highest monthly total—on demand for semiconductors, displays, and ships. EU exports advanced 10.3% to $5.6 billion, driven by chips, biohealth products, and vessels.

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Reactions on X to South Korea's February exports surging 29% to a record $67.45 billion emphasize the role of semiconductor demand from the AI boom, with 9th consecutive month of growth and record chip shipments over $20B. Users highlight beats on expectations, positive outlook for chip stocks like SK Hynix, Samsung, NVDA, and describe the streak as unstoppable. Neutral data posts note a slight dip from January's 33.8%.

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Photorealistic depiction of South Korea's Busan port with cargo ships carrying semiconductors, overlaid graphs showing record $86.13 billion exports.
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South Korea's March exports hit $86.13 billion, all-time high

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South Korea's exports reached $86.13 billion in March, breaching the $80 billion mark for the first time ever. According to data from the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources, this represents a 48.3 percent increase from a year earlier. Record semiconductor shipments drove the surge.

South Korea's exports rose 36.7 percent year-on-year to a record $25.2 billion in the April 1-10 period, fueled by strong semiconductor demand. Korea Customs Service data showed imports up 12.7 percent to $22.1 billion, resulting in a $3.1 billion trade surplus.

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South Korea's exports jumped 53 percent from a year earlier to a record $87.8 billion in May, driven by the semiconductor supercycle.

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.

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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.

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