Data clearly suggested the upturn of the semiconductor cycle to be Korea’s main growth driver. But domestic growth deteriorated further due to tight credit conditions and risky real estate sector, weighing on overall growth. With inflation cooling to the 2% level, the Bank of Korea will have to consider the stability of the financial markets as well.FreepikThanks to solid global demand for semiconductors, manufacturing activity and exports should be the driving force behind growth after fourth quarter 2023, but we believe that the semiconductor boom won’t be enough to drive overall growth. Services and investment are expected to contract as tight credit conditions will weigh more heavily on private consumption and investment entering 2024. The Korean domestic economy is likely to face strong headwinds as prolonged issues of construction and project financing will emerge in earnest, negatively impacting the growth throughout the first half of 2024.Inflation cooled down more than expected in December and should reach the 2% range in the first quarter of 2024 with the help of government policies and falling commodity prices. But, after that, inflation will likely settle at the 2% level for a considerable time as accumulated inflation pressures, such as delayed utilities and public service price hikes will be passed on to consumer prices. However, demand-driven price pressures will be set to die down with tight monetary conditions and sub-potential level of growth.With inflation anchored at the 2% level and domestic economy suffering from tight credit conditions, the Bank of Korea (BoK) may begin its rate cuts from the second quarter at the earliest and deliver a total of 50bp in 2024. Exports gained for the third consecutive month thanks to solid semiconductor and vehicle shipmentsExports growth slowed to 5.1% year-on-year in December (vs 7.7% in November, 3.7% market consensus) due to unfavorable calendar effects. Eight out of 15 major exports items increased with the most notable rise in semiconductors (21.8%) and vehicles (17.9%). The recovery in semiconductors is expected to continue to be led by new mobile model launches and increased investment in AI servers while vehicle exports have remained solid so far but are expected to lose some steam in the coming months. By export destination, exports to the US (20.8%), ASEAN (1.7%) gained while exports to China (-2.9%) and the EU (-20.0%) dropped. Imports declined -10.8% YoY in December (vs -11.6% in November, -11.1% market consensus) with falling global commodity prices. But consumer goods imports also dropped quite sharply (-10.0%), suggesting domestic demand weakened further. Combined with AI technology driven semiconductor recovery and falling commodity prices, terms of trade will likely improve and the net export contribution to GDP should remain positive in the fourth quarter of 2023.Semiconductors and vehicles are the main drivers for export growthGovernment sources Manufacturing production rose stronger than expected, but all other industry activity contracted in NovemberAll industry production edged up 0.5% month-on-month seasonally adjusted in November (vs -1.8% in October), narrowly driven by solid semiconductor output. Manufacturing IP gained a stronger than expected 3.3% (vs -3.8% in October, 1.4% market consensus) but did not fully offset the previous month’s decline, and the gain was narrowly concentrated in semiconductors (12.8%) and related machinery while other major industries such as vehicles (-3.3%), electrical equipment (-1.5%), and basic metals (-5.7%) were down. Excluding manufacturing, other activities – services (-0.1%), construction (-4.1%), and public administration (-0.9%) all declined. Service activities fell for the second month as leisure-related services declined the most with accommodations (-2.0%), eating out (-0.3%) and recreation (-3.1%) down.Monthly IP suggested a quite sharp slowdown of GDP in 4Q23Government sources Retail sales rebounded but mainly due to government supportRetail sales rose 1.0% MoM sa in November (vs -0.8% in October) led by significant rises in vehicle sales (10.2%) and household appliances (5.1%), as both were supported by the government’s tax benefits and shopping aid program. Thus, we believe this month’s rebound should be temporary and expect a negative technical payback in coming months. Investment should be the main risk factor for near-term growth, especially project financing-related issuesBoth facility (-2.6%) and construction (-4.1%) outputs slid in November. Machinery orders gained for a second month thanks to the revival of the semiconductor cycle, but other orders remained soft. Construction orders continued to decline and thus the ongoing restructuring of project financing and poor housing market will be the main risk factors for the economy. A major construction company applied for a debt restructuring programOver the Christmas holiday, Taeyoung E&C, one of Korea’s largest builders (16th largest in terms of construction capacity), applied for a debt-restructuring program due to a liquidity shortage, affected by large-scale project financing loans. The company owns quite valuable assets and subsidiaries, and thus the workout process will be processed smoothly in our opinion, with its direct negative impact on financial markets being quite limited. But, the real concern is that the industry itself has been suffering quite a long time from tight liquidity conditions amid a sluggish real estate market. The government and industry have supported several restructuring programmes since early last year but there will be more credit crunches, especially among small- and medium-sized local builders with high exposure to project financing loans, probably not covered by workout programmes. We believe that investor sentiment will be quite dampened for a while and non-IG credits will likely be hampered the most. As tight mortgage rules will be applied from early 2024 and higher borrowing costs to persist, we believe the slump in the property market will not only drag down investment but also consumption. Inflation slowed faster than expected in December mainly due to falling commodity pricesConsumer prices decelerated to 3.2% YoY in December (vs 3.3% in November and market consensus) mainly due to the sharp decline in petroleum prices (-4.5% MoM nsa) and rental prices (-0.1%). However, other major prices such as fresh food (2.1%), manufactured food (0.1%), and private services (0.3%) went up.Going forward, the high base last year will bring down headline inflation quite sharply from early 2024. Also, we believe that government efforts to curb price will continue to stabilize prices in the near future. The government decided to extend its fuel tax cut program until February 2024, will likely hike utility prices in the second quarter, along with a reduction in the liquor tax. But most government programs will come to an end, probably in the second quarter. Then we expect utility and public service prices to rebound, and thus consumer prices will settle at the 2% range for a while. We see demand side pressures softening due to tight monetary conditions and a sluggish domestic economy, and thus the Bank of Korea policy will turn its direction in the second quarter at the earliest. Inflation will likely cool down quite sharply due to base effects and government support in 1Q24 Government sources Survey results were stronger than expected but it did not change our cloudy near-term outlookConsumer sentiment rebounded surprisingly in December, offsetting some of the previous four-month decline. The consumer sentiment composite index rose for the first time in five months to 99.5 in December (vs 97.2 in November). Future expected interest rate cuts by the Fed and the BoK and resilient labour conditions may have resulted in the biggest improvement in consumer confidence in the economic situation. We believe that a recovery in exports and equity markets also could be reasons for this month’s unexpected turnaround, but we are not sure if the upbeat mood is temporary or sustainable from now on, as expectations on housing prices, which is the biggest risk factor for near-term growth and the most sensitive variable to sway consumer sentiment, have plunged for three months. Meanwhile, inflation expectations for next 12 months dropped to 3.2%, the lowest since May 2022, and thus it could be a sign of relief for the Bank of Korea.Despite ongoing restructuring of the construction and project financing, the improvement in the business sentiment is believed to be largely due to the recovery of the semiconductor cycle. Local surveys conducted by the Federation of Korean Industry (95.2 in December vs 91.2 in November) and the Bank of Korea (72 in January vs 72 in December for manufacturing, 73 in January vs 71 in December for non-manufacturing) improved.However, since the domestic construction industry is having trouble and credit conditions are expected to become tighter, we are cautious about giving a positive assessment of near-term future economic growth. Bank of Korea watch: Restrictive to Neutral but not to AccommodativeThe Bank of Korea will be required to encompass not only price stability but also financial market stability and seek to induce an orderly soft landing of the domestic economy. We believe that the Bank of Korea’s policy priority will shift from curbing inflation to stabilising the financial market in the first half of 2024 as tight credit conditions will begin to hit the economy. There have been some signs of it from the construction industry, surrounding bad project financing loans. But, the BoK’s cuts will inevitably be quite gradual. The ongoing efforts to slow down the excessive growth of private debt should be continued and the Fed’s policy rate will remain higher than the BoK’s throughout this year, which will hinder the BoK’s aggressitve rate cuts. Thus, we believe that the BoK will keep its policy rate at the neutral level and not enter into accommodative territory in 2024.More By This Author:Japan Data Brief : What You May Have Missed Over The Year-End Holiday
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