
South Korea’s exports surged again in June, powered by the same force reshaping factories and stock prices across the tech world: the planet cannot get enough memory chips for artificial intelligence. The Korea Customs Service reported Wednesday that exports adjusted for working-day differences climbed 59.5% from a year earlier, one of the strongest monthly gains the trade-driven economy has logged in years.
On a raw, unadjusted basis, shipments jumped 70.9%, pushing the country’s total monthly export value above $100 billion for the first time, according to figures reported by Nikkei Asia. Imports rose 30.1%, leaving South Korea with a trade surplus of $36.1 billion for the month.
Behind those numbers are two companies that have become indispensable to the global AI boom: Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. The two Korean manufacturers produce much of the world’s advanced memory chips, including DRAM and high-bandwidth memory used in smartphones, laptops, AI servers, and massive data centers.
As companies including Nvidia, OpenAI, and the world’s largest cloud providers race to build more artificial intelligence infrastructure, demand for those chips has surged. Semiconductor shipments from Samsung and SK Hynix reached record monthly values, helping drive Korea’s export boom.
The effects extend far beyond South Korea.
Memory chips are a critical component in nearly every modern electronic device. Strong demand has already contributed to higher costs for computers, smartphones, gaming systems, and other consumer electronics. As AI infrastructure expands worldwide, manufacturers continue competing for limited supplies of advanced memory, supporting higher prices throughout the technology supply chain.
The report also carries geopolitical significance.
South Korea remains one of America’s closest economic partners while simultaneously running a substantial trade surplus with the United States. As the Trump administration continues emphasizing trade balances, Korea finds itself balancing its strategic alliance with Washington against its growing importance as one of the world’s leading semiconductor suppliers.
For South Korea, semiconductors have become both a tremendous strength and a growing vulnerability. Chips now account for an increasingly large share of the country’s exports, making economic growth heavily dependent on continued AI investment around the world. As long as technology companies continue building new data centers, Korean exports are likely to remain strong. Any slowdown in AI spending, however, could quickly ripple through the country’s broader economy.
Industry analysts expect demand to remain elevated.
Major cloud providers continue investing billions of dollars in AI infrastructure, while shortages of advanced high-bandwidth memory are expected to persist well into next year. Both Samsung and SK Hynix continue expanding production capacity to keep pace with orders from customers developing next-generation AI systems.
The June export figures also highlight the uneven nature of today’s global economy. While many countries continue experiencing sluggish manufacturing activity, South Korea has become one of the world’s biggest beneficiaries of artificial intelligence spending. The country’s technology sector has effectively become a barometer for global AI investment.
For American businesses and consumers, the report provides another reminder that many of the essential components powering today’s AI revolution originate in South Korea. As demand continues climbing, the cost and availability of those chips will influence everything from smartphone prices to cloud-computing services and the next generation of artificial intelligence products.
The latest export data suggests that, for now, the AI investment boom remains firmly intact—and South Korea continues to be one of its biggest winners.
JBizNews Desk
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