South Korea’s Oct import prices rise at slowest pace in 15 months

A truck driver stands next to his truck as he gets ready to transport a shipping container at Pusan Newport Terminal in Busan

SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s export and import prices rose at slower paces in October, with the latter softening to a 15-month low, central bank data showed on Tuesday.

The country’s export prices, in terms of the won currency, rose 13.7% in October from a year earlier, according to the Bank of Korea’s provisional data, slower than a revised 14.7% rise in the previous month.

Import prices also rose at a slower annual rate of 19.8%, compared with a revised 24.2% gain in September, and it marked the slowest rate since July 2021.

The slowdown came despite higher oil prices and a weaker currency than in the previous month, with Dubai oil prices and dollar-won exchange rates rising 0.2% and 2.5% on monthly average, respectively, according to the BOK.

In October 2021, export and import prices jumped 26.1% and 36.3%, respectively, marking their fastest annual growth rates in more than 13 years.

(Reporting by Jihoon Lee, Editing by William Maclean)

Ad: Save every day with Amazon Deals: Check out today's daily deals on Amazon.

Related posts

Spirit Christmas expands New Jersey holiday pop-ups with new 2025 locations including Toms River

Flight attendant age discrimination suit moves forward in New Jersey court against United Airlines

Judge tosses inmate’s civil rights suit against Gov. Murphy over confinement claims