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South Korean April exports rise 48.0% y/y as chip boom extends

By Thomson Reuters Apr 30, 2026 | 7:36 PM

By Cynthia Kim and Heejin Kim

SEOUL, May 1 (Reuters) – South Korean exports rose for an 11th month in April, beating forecasts, as the global appetite for artificial intelligence infrastructure ​boosted semiconductor sales to offset jitters from the Middle East ‌conflict.

Exports from Asia’s fourth-largest economy, a bellwether for global trade, jumped 48.0% from a year earlier, government data showed on Friday, exceeding a median 45.3% increase forecast in a Reuters poll.

Semiconductor exports rose 173% from a year earlier, buoyed ‌by ​rising contract prices for memory chips, the ⁠industry ministry said in ⁠a statement. Shipments of petroleum products rose 40% on higher crude prices, while computer-related exports also soared 516%, driven by strong demand for solid-state drives amid the AI boom.

Automobile exports fell 5.5% ​from a year earlier, weighed down by the Middle East tensions and expanding U.S. car production, the ministry said. Exports of ⁠electric and hybrid vehicles, however, rose 23% ⁠and 9%, respectively.

By country, South Korea’s exports to ​China jumped 63% and those to the U.S. grew 54%, both led ​by semiconductors.

Imports increased 16.7% in April from a year ago, ‌also outpacing a 14.5% gain tipped in the poll.

The trade figures land just days after chip giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix <000660.KS> reported blockbuster quarterly profits, in a sign the chip crunch is helping ⁠the export-led economy to weather the downside risks stemming from the ongoing conflict involving Iran.

Samsung Electronics on Thursday said the profit gains were driven ⁠by a 49-fold jump ‌in chip income, days after SK Hynix reported ⁠its profit climbed on a five-fold jump in ​earnings.

“While ‌the Middle East conflict has driven crude oil ​imports up for ⁠a third consecutive month, high-margin tech shipments and a surge in exports of computer peripherals are more than offsetting energy costs,” said Park Chong-hoon, an economist at the Standard Chartered Bank Korea.

The preliminary trade surplus was $23.77 billion.

(Reporting by Cynthia Kim and Heejin Kim; Editing by Christian ​Schmollinger, Ed Davies)