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Home News Asia The Conference Board Leading Economic Index™ (LEI) for Korea Increased 1.5 Percent in November 2009


The Conference Board Leading Economic Index™ (LEI) for Korea Increased 1.5 Percent in November 2009
added: 2010-01-16

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index™ (LEI) for Korea increased 1.5 percent and The Conference Board Coincident Economic Index™ (CEI) for Korea increased 0.3 percent in November.

The Conference Board LEI for Korea increased in November following no change in October, as large positive contributions by private construction orders, real exports and letter of credit arrivals more than offset a negative contribution from value of machinery orders. With this month's gain, the six-month growth rate in the leading economic index continued to pick up, to 7.1 percent (about a 14.7 percent annual rate) in the six-month period through November 2009, well above the 0.5 percent rate (about a 1.0 percent annual rate) for the previous six months. In addition, the strengths among the leading indicators have remained widespread in recent months although the gains have been volatile.

The Conference Board CEI for Korea, a measure of current economic activity, also increased in November following a small decline in October. Industrial production increased sharply, while total employment and the wholesale and retail sales component made negative contributions to the index. With this month's small gain, the coincident economic index increased by 2.0 percent (about a 3.9 percent annual rate) during the six-month period ending in November 2009, up from the 0.6 percent growth (about a 1.1 percent annual rate) for the previous six months. At the same time, real GDP has continued to expand, by 12.3 percent (annual rate) in the third quarter of 2009, following an average increase of 5.6 percent (annual rate) for the first half of the year.

Although its six-month growth rate has moderated somewhat in the last three months, The Conference Board CEI for Korea has recovered substantially since early 2009. At the same time, The Conference Board LEI for Korea is now back above its September 2008 level; however, it is still well below its most recent peak reached in November 2007. Taken together, the current behavior of the composite indexes and their components suggests that the economy will continue to recover, but likely at a more modest pace in the near term.

LEADING INDICATORS

Five of the seven components that make up The Conference Board LEI for Korea increased in November. The positive contributors - from the largest positive contributor to the smallest - were private construction orders, real exports FOB, letter of credit arrivals, the (inverted) index of inventories to shipments, and the (inverted) yield of government public bonds. Negative contributions occurred in value of machinery orders and stock prices.

With the 1.5 percent increase in November, The Conference Board LEI for Korea now stands at 111.6 (2004=100). Based on revised data, this index remained unchanged in October and increased 2.4 percent in September. During the six-month span through November, the leading economic index increased 7.1 percent, with six of the seven components advancing (diffusion index, six-month span equals 85.7 percent).

COINCIDENT INDICATORS

Two of the four components that make up The Conference Board CEI for Korea increased in November. The positive contributors were industrial production and monthly cash earnings. Total employment and the wholesale and retail sales component declined in November.

With the 0.3 percent increase in November, The Conference Board CEI for Korea now stands at 109.7 (2004=100). Based on revised data, this index decreased 0.3 percent in October and increased 0.8 percent in September. During the six-month span through November, the coincident economic index increased 2.0 percent, with three of the four components advancing (diffusion index, six-month span equals 75.0 percent).


Source: The Conference Board

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