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Korea's Export Engine Slips into Reverse as Japan Steps on the Gas

Aepsilons

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South Korea’s much-vaunted export machine is losing steam as the won rises against the euro and the yen, undercutting sales in global markets.

That's in sharp contrast to Japan, where currency depreciation is giving a leg up to large manufacturers that ship their wares abroad.

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While domestic demand and consumer sentiment in Korea have shown signs of a pick-up following three interest-rate cuts since August, exports have dropped for four straight months this year. The weakness extends to cars and ships -- two mainstays of the nation’s manufacturing base.

In a worrying sign for Korean policy makers and economists, the latest data for April show exports not only contracting in value terms, but also shrinking in volume.

Shipments from Japan by volume are at the highest level in three years, with the government citing strength in automobiles, electronic parts and metal-working machinery.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. say this increases the chances of the Bank of Korea defying expectations with a cut in its benchmark interest rate to 1.5 percent on May 15.

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“The plummeting export figure of April has become a pressing issue facing Korea,” ANZ’s Raymond Yeung wrote in a report this week. “The currency strength of won relative to yen has been a lingering concern.”
ANZ and Goldman still expect the central bank to hold off this month and leave rates at a record low 1.75 percent. Another 14 respondents to a Bloomberg survey agree, while Nomura Holdings Inc. and Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute forecast a cut to 1.5 percent.

The won rose to the highest level in more than seven years against the yen this month and in April jumped to a nine-year high versus the euro.

Korean Finance Minister Choi Kyung Hwan has noted the pain caused by the currency and said this month that the government would find ways to support overseas shipments. Bank of Korea Governor Lee Ju Yeol said last week that exports were a concern, but that the BOK would not adjust rates just for exports.

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“Weak export figures in Korea support our view that the monetary easing cycle is not over,” said Ronald Man, a Hong Kong-based economist for HSBC Holdings Plc. “Price competition with Japan has intensified and this weighs on economic growth in Korea’s trade dependent economy.”


Korea's Export Engine Slips into Reverse as Japan Steps on the Gas - Bloomberg Business
 
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South Korea’s much-vaunted export machine is losing steam as the won rises against the euro and the yen, undercutting sales in global markets.

This is the crux of the article. There have been no productivity gains made by Japan; its simply relying on competitive currency depreciation. Once S. Korea fears that Japan is eating too much into their pie, they may be apt to do the same exchange rate trick.

All this comes at China's detriment as well. As part of our national re-balancing strategy towards domestic consumption, we have been loathe to see our currency depreciate. The RMB is the only major currency not to have lost value against the surging USD. But if exports, our traditional engine of growth, is affected too much, we may also have to resort to some form of monetary easing. Which would be a shame; I quite enjoy the current purchasing power of the RMB, lol.
 
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Lol, but manufacturing output is up and heading to a continued path.

Ah , why can't you be happy for us?
 
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This is the crux of the article. There have been no productivity gains made by Japan; its simply relying on competitive currency depreciation. Once S. Korea fears that Japan is eating too much into their pie, they may be apt to do the same exchange rate trick.

All this comes at China's detriment as well. As part of our national re-balancing strategy towards domestic consumption, we have been loathe to see our currency depreciate. The RMB is the only major currency not to have lost value against the surging USD. But if exports, our traditional engine of growth, is affected too much, we may also have to resort to some form of monetary easing. Which would be a shame; I quite enjoy the current purchasing power of the RMB, lol.
The CPC will do the balance. China do import large number of commodities despite China also being an export powerhouse. The rise of yuan will be the trend.
 
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Lol, but manufacturing output is up and heading to a continued path.

Ah , why can't you be happy for us?

I am happy for you 8-) Economic is not a zero-sum game. I'm simply pointing out Japan's current manufacturing surge is not built on anything game-changing, or decisive, or necessarily lasting, but simply a fickle exchange rate advantage. The Koreans aren't likely to take this lying down. What will you do if they enact their own intensive QE? Print more yen yet again? It would disappoint me to see these crucial monetary policies addressed using "brute-force", tit-for-tat policies of instead of something creative or ingenuous.

The CPC will do the balance. China do import large number of commodities despite China also being an export powerhouse. The rise of yuan will be the trend.

Yeah I hope so. I plan on studying overseas again in the not-so-distant future, want to get as much bang for my yuan as possible :p:
 
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Lol, but manufacturing output is up and heading to a continued path.

Ah , why can't you be happy for us?
I just checked, actually there's a trade surplus for Japan, Korea, and ASEAN when talking about China, while US, EU, and them boys barely registers in terms of total trade for China.

If only I could remember which idiot said China would be done if we can't export to these countries.

Overall, good to see, Japan is our Germany, probably never going to have a positive trade balance, and that's fine. Interestingly, Germany is also our Germany.
 
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When the Koreans bought the F-15K.. most analysts concluded the Chinese threat or striking at DPRK nuclear installations. But certain people were of the view that the aircraft had a second threat focus towards Japan, and the aircraft's superiority to anything the Japanese had then or may have till recently.
The basis for such a claim being that the RoKAF sees potential resource disputes arising sooner rather than later with Japan over fishing and mineral resources where outright confrontation is a real possibility.
 
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Korea losing steam is kinda expected. A major problem with South Korea is that it economic structure is way too concentration on a few sectors. While it is understandable they did that because they only have so much land and population, it still means that if they have a slump in a few sectors, the entire economy will suffer rather than having other sectors to make it up.

If you just compare South Korea and Japan, Japan is likely to come out on top over the long run because its larger population and size.
 
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Glad to see Korean tears over this! I wish them the worst in luck and they crash
 
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That Wikipedia entry is disappointing then, lol

List of the largest trading partners of China - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Still a lot better than I previously thought though.

That Wikipedia entry shows the US as China's largest trading partner by a significant margin. What did you mean when you said "the US barely registers in terms of total trade with China"? More importantly, why do you believe China would be unaffected if that trade disappeared (e.g. the implication of second sentence I quoted in the previous post).
 
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