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Current account surplus hits 6-month high in May

South Korea’s current account surplus hit a six-month high in May due mainly to a fall in dividend payouts to foreign investors, the central bank said Thursday.

The current account surplus reached $3.61 billion in May, up from a revised $1.73 billion the previous month, according to the Bank of Korea. The current account is the broadest measure of cross-border trade.

The May data marked the largest surplus since the $4.56 billion in November 2011 and the current account remained in the black for the fourth straight month in May.

The current account turned to a deficit in January after it remained in the black for the 22nd straight month in December 2011 on the back of exports, which account for about 50 percent of Asia’s fourth-largest economy.

The BOK said the surplus for June is expected to be larger than the May figures mainly because overseas shipments tend to increase at the end of each quarter.

“The combined surplus for the first half is likely to reach near $12 billion,” Yang Jae-ryong, director of the BOK’s monetary and financial statistics division, said at a press conference. In the January-May period, the accumulative surplus reached $7.91 billion.

Despite an upward trend of the surplus, however, the eurozone debt crisis and bleak global economic outlooks are blurring prospects for the export-dependent South Korean economy.

The BOK puts its 2012 current account surplus projection at $14.5 billion, smaller than $26.5 billion tallied for last year. In April, the bank revised down this year’s economic growth outlook to 3.5 percent from an earlier 3.7 percent estimate.

South Korea’s goods balance logged a surplus of $1.75 billion in May, almost unchanged from the previous month, the BOK said.

The value of exports and imports declined last month, compared with a year earlier, spanning concerns that the country’s overseas shipments are beset by the eurozone debt problems. 

(Yonhap News)
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