SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA / MENA Newswire / — South Korea’s industrial output, retail sales and equipment investment all declined in April from the previous month, official data showed, marking a broad monthly pullback across production, consumption and capital spending. The Ministry of Data and Statistics said the index of all industry production fell 0.6 percent in April from March, while retail sales, a gauge of private consumption, dropped 3.6 percent and equipment investment also declined 3.6 percent.

The April figures showed weaker monthly activity across several major parts of Asia’s fourth-largest economy. Manufacturing production fell 0.8 percent from March, while services output decreased 1.0 percent. The mining and manufacturing sector fell 0.7 percent from the previous month, with automobile output down 10 percent. Semiconductor production increased 3.1 percent, providing a contrasting gain within the broader manufacturing data.
Compared with a year earlier, several indicators remained higher despite the monthly declines. All industry production rose 2.4 percent from April 2025, while manufacturing output increased 1.6 percent and services output advanced 3.5 percent. Retail sales were 1.6 percent higher than a year earlier, and equipment investment rose 8.1 percent on an annual basis, according to the official monthly industrial statistics release.
Production indicators weaken
The Ministry of Data and Statistics said manufacturing shipments fell 3.6 percent from the previous month and 1.3 percent from a year earlier. Manufacturing inventories increased 1.7 percent from March but were 0.4 percent lower than a year earlier. The production capacity index declined 0.1 percent from the previous month and rose 0.5 percent from April 2025, while the index of capacity utilization decreased 1.6 percent month to month.
The manufacturing average capacity utilization rate stood at 73.7 percent in April, down 1.2 percentage points from March. Construction activity also weakened on a completed work basis, with the value of construction completed at constant prices falling 1.4 percent from the previous month and 5.5 percent from a year earlier. Construction orders received at current prices rose 39.3 percent from April 2025.
Investment and cycle data diverge
Investment data showed a mixed picture beneath the headline monthly decline. The equipment investment index dropped 3.6 percent from March, while remaining 8.1 percent higher than a year earlier. The domestic machinery shipment index rose 1.6 percent year on year, but the value of domestic machinery orders received fell 7.6 percent from April 2025, reflecting uneven readings across machinery-related indicators in the official release.
Business cycle indicators moved higher in April even as output, retail sales and equipment investment declined on a monthly basis. The composite coincident index increased 0.3 percent from March, and its cyclical component, which reflects current economic conditions, rose 0.2 points. The composite leading index advanced 0.9 percent, while its cyclical component, used to track turning points in the business cycle, increased 0.6 points.