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Foreign IBs see firm export growth for Korea this year

Foreign investment banks predict South Korea’s export growth will likely top those of its Asian peers mainly due to increased demand from China and a free trade pact with the U.S. set to take effect early this year, data showed Monday.

Global investment bank HSBC expected Korea’s export to grow 9.7 percent on-year in the first quarter of 2012, with the figure to stay above the 9 percent through most of the remainder of the year, according to the data by the Korea Center for International Finance.

China’s export growth is estimated at 6 percent in the first quarter with the corresponding figure for Japan to be minus 9.8 percent, the data showed.

Korea’s exports grew nearly 20 percent on-year in 2011 to a record high of US$556.5 billion, according to the Korea Customs Service.

Foreign IBs including Credit Suisse cited the high quality of Korean goods, firm demand from emerging markets and a more positive U.S. economy as reasons for Korea’s rosy export outlook.

Another IB, Nomura, forecast Korea’s gross domestic product will expand 2.3 percent when the Korea-U.S. FTA goes into effect in the face of a global economic slowdown.

However, the IBs painted a dim picture of a dent in firms’ investment, a stagnation in real income growth and a slowdown in the housing market for Korea.

(Yonhap News)
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