Looking ahead, the US-Korea trade agreement reached on 29 October is expected to alleviate pressure on auto exports. Furthermore, easing trade tensions between the US and China would likely have a positive impact on Korean exports. Chipmakers have provided robust forward guidance for their 2026 performance, with major firms having already filled their order books for that year and anticipating sustained strength in memory prices. Vessel exports are expected to remain robust based on the high volume of orders taken over the past 2–3 years. Thus, we believe exports will rise modestly in 2026 despite an anticipated slowdown in US demand.
Including October trade outcomes, recent data suggest another solid quarter of growth. Despite reduced government cash handouts, positive consumer sentiment and strong equities are expected to support private consumption, while exports and equipment investment are expected to remain steady. Thus, we maintain a 0.6% quarter-on-quarter, seasonally-adjusted, growth outlook for the fourth quarter 1.2% YoY for 2025. As such, we have raised our 2026 GDP outlook from 1.8% to 2.0% based on a more optimistic outlook for exports and domestic demand.
With growth conditions improving and inflation staying around 2%, the Bank of Korea’s focus should remain on financial market instability. Housing prices are expected to stabilise for a couple of quarters while the negative GDP gap still persists. Thus, this could justify the BoK’s 25 bp cut in the first half of 2026. However, 2.25% should be the terminal rate for this easing cycle. Lower interest rates could have implications for the housing market, which should be a major concern for the BoK. Additionally, the BoK considers 2.25% to be the lower bound of the neutral interest rate. Additionally, normalisation of growth in the second half of 2026 could support the conclusion of the easing cycle.
