|

South Korea: Growth outlook supported by chips and fiscal boost – ING

ING economist Min Joo Kang highlights that South Korea’s 1Q26 GDP is set to rebound on strong chip-led exports and recovering investment, but trims the 2026 GDP forecast to 2.0% from 2.2%. She notes rising downside risks from supply disruptions and higher energy prices, partly offset by a sizeable supplementary budget and resilient external demand.

Chip strength offsets rising headwinds

"If supply disruptions persist, adverse effects could become evident in the second half of 2026. Given Korea’s high dependence on chips for growth, negative impacts could intensify later this year."

"The extra budget will lift government spending in 2026 to 752.1 trillion won, an 11.8% year-on-year increase, projected to raise GDP by 0.2 percentage points. Both parties agreed to approve the bill by 10 April."

"Thus, we expect growth to decelerate to 0.2% QoQ but to avoid a contraction in 2Q26. Along with trimming down the 2Q26 and 3Q26 GDP, we have lowered our 2026 GDP outlook from 2.2% YoY to 2.0%."

"Higher energy prices for longer and supplementary budget measures could increase upward inflation risks in coming months. If we are right about the resilience of the economy and a higher-inflation path, then the Bank of Korea's policy focus will be on inflation stabilisation and financial stability."

"We expect strong demand for AI and memory chips to continue, with no significant signs of a slowdown in AI investment globally. But clearly, this is likely to add to inflationary pressures on IT goods globally – and, eventually, more burdens for consumers."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD retreats further, clinches three-day lows

The British Pound comes under extra selling pressure at the beginning of the week, dragging GBP/USD to fresh three-day troughs near 1.3350. Cable’s steady drop follows the improved tone in the Greenback as effervescence in the Middle East remains everything but abated.

EUR/USD posts modest gains above 1.1350 as traders await US CPI inflation release

The EUR/USD pair posts modest gains near 1.1385 during the Asian trading hours on Tuesday. Nonetheless, the potential upside for the major pair might be limited amid renewed US military strikes against Iran. Traders will take more cues from the US June Consumer Price Index inflation data, which will be released later on Tuesday. 

Gold re-attempts $4,000 ahead of US CPI, Fed's Warsh

Gold is attempting a tepid bounce from a two-week low, around $3,985 in the Asian session on Tuesday, regaining $4,000 amid a pause in the US Dollar's advance, as bulls turn cautious ahead of the US CPI report and Fed Chair Warsh's testimony before placing fresh directional bets. Meanwhile, escalating US-Iran tensions have led to higher Oil prices, which could check Gold's recovery amid rising inflation concerns and increased Fed rate hike bets.

Bitcoin holds near $62K ahead of key macroeconomic reports

Bitcoin traded near $62,000 on Monday, holding onto recent gains as investors adopted little conviction ahead of key macroeconomic reports this week. In a report on Monday, QCP analysts highlighted that Tuesday's US Consumer Price Index data could be the first major catalyst to decide the market's direction.

Oil jumps, bonds break and the AI trade starts losing its shine

Wall Street finally ran into the collision course it had spent weeks pretending would never happen. Oil surged, bonds sold off, the dollar caught a bid, and the most crowded corner of the equity market began to buckle under its own weight.

Five sessions, one round trip: Why the whipsaw is exactly what Warsh ordered

Markets opened July with a December hike as the base case and spent five trading sessions unlearning and relearning it. A 57K payrolls print bled the tightening bets out of the strip; a re-shut Strait of Hormuz is pushing them back in. Wednesday's minutes from the June FOMC meeting landed mid-round-trip, describing a world that had already stopped existing.