South Korea's exports rebounded in July from the previous month's slight fall, largely due to a continued rise in outbound shipments of chips and petrochemical goods, government data showed Wednesday.

Outbound shipments reached US$51.88 billion last month, up 6.2 percent from a year ago, according to the data compiled by the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy.

In June, the country's exports inched down due to fewer working days and a high base effect.

Containers carrying export goods are stacked on the piers of South Korea's largest port city of Busan on Jan. 1, 2018, in this file photo. (Yonhap)

Imports surged 16.2 percent on-year to $44.88 billion last month.

South Korea's trade surplus came to $7.01 billion, marking 78 straight months in which the country's exports have exceeded imports, the ministry said.

The cumulative exports of Asia's fourth-largest economy rose 6.4 percent to $349.1 billion in the first seven months of the year, the highest to date, the ministry said.

Average daily exports stood at $2.16 billion in July, up 4 percent from a year earlier, marking the rise for the third consecutive month.

Shipments of semiconductors jumped 31.6 percent to $10.38 billion last month on upbeat sales of high-value memory chips and storage devices in major markets, including China and the United States.

Overseas sales of petrochemical products rose 24.1 percent to exceed $4 billion for eight months in a row for the first time, aided by strong demand and rising oil prices.

Auto parts sales in overseas markets advanced 7.2 percent last month, with overseas sales of steel goods rising 34 percent last month, the data showed.

In contrast, exports of vehicles declined 13.5 percent due to sluggish sales in the North American market and expanded production in overseas factories.

Outbound shipments of ships continued to fall diving 73.4 percent in the face of tougher competition from Chinese rivals and a global supply glut.

By country, exports to China and the United States, South Korea's two largest trading partners, rose 27.3 percent and 8.8 percent, respectively, on robust sales of memory chips, petrochemical and machinery products.

The industry ministry said a global economic recovery, coupled with stable prices of key export items, will help the country's outbound shipments remain robust, but it cited rising trade protectionism in major economies and volatility in the global financial market as potential risks. (yonhap)

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