South Korea’s Q1 GDP rose 1.7% q/q and 3.6% y/y (exp. 2.7%, prev. 1.6%), beating forecasts. Growth was driven by a 5.1% surge in exports led by semiconductors, highlighting strong AI-linked demand and reliance on external drivers.
Summary:
Q1 GDP: +1.7% q/q (exp. +1.0%) → strongest since Q3 2020
Y/Y GDP: +3.6% (exp. +2.7%, prev. +1.6%) → sharp acceleration
Exports +5.1% → driven by semiconductors and AI demand
Investment rebounds +4.8% after prior contraction
Consumption modest +0.5%; government spending subdued
South Korea’s economy delivered a strong upside surprise in the first quarter of 2026, supported by robust semiconductor exports and a rebound in investment, highlighting the country’s exposure to the global artificial intelligence cycle.
Data from the Bank of Korea showed gross domestic product expanded 1.7% quarter-on-quarter in the January–March period, comfortably exceeding expectations for a 1.0% increase. The result marks the fastest quarterly growth since the third quarter of 2020, when the economy was rebounding from pandemic disruptions.
On an annual basis, growth accelerated sharply to 3.6%, up from 1.6% in the previous quarter and well above forecasts for 2.7%. The jump underscores a significant improvement in momentum, driven primarily by external demand.
Exports were the key engine, rising 5.1% over the quarter, led by shipments of IT components, particularly semiconductors linked to artificial intelligence infrastructure. Strong global demand for chips continues to underpin South Korea’s export sector, reinforcing its position as a critical node in the global technology supply chain.
Domestic demand showed more modest improvement. Private consumption increased 0.5%, suggesting a gradual recovery in household spending following earlier signs of stabilisation. However, government expenditure rose just 0.1%, continuing to weigh on the broader growth profile.
Investment provided a notable positive contribution, with facility investment rising 4.8% after contracting by 1.7% in the previous quarter. The rebound points to improving corporate confidence, particularly in export-oriented and technology-related sectors.
The composition of growth highlights an economy still heavily reliant on external drivers. While the export and investment surge is delivering strong headline growth, softer domestic demand and limited fiscal support indicate that the recovery remains uneven.
Looking ahead, the sustainability of this growth will depend on continued strength in semiconductor demand and the broader AI investment cycle, as well as whether improvements in external demand begin to translate into more durable domestic momentum.
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The data reinforces the global AI and semiconductor demand narrative, supporting Asian export equities and chip-related sectors. However, the reliance on external demand leaves the outlook sensitive to shifts in the global tech cycle, while soft domestic demand limits broader macro spillovers.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.