South Korea’s Kospi hits record high on trade deal optimism, IMF growth forecast upgrade

South Korea’s Kospi index closed at a record high Thursday, after the International Monetary Fund raised the country’s 2025 growth forecast to 0.9% from 0.8% in its October outlook report.

The IMF also raised its growth projection for the global economy, saying the impact of U.S. tariffs was “at the modest end of the range.”

It cited several reasons for upgrading the forecast, including the agility of the private sector, which front-loaded imports in the first half of the year and quickly reorganized supply chains to redirect trade flows; trade deals between the U.S. and other countries; and the overall restraint from much of the world, which largely kept the global trading system open.

“The devil’s in the details, but we are ironing out the details,” he added.

The autos, electronics and industrial equipment firms led gains on the Kospi index. Shares of Samsung Electronics rose 2.84% to an all-time high, while Hyundai Motor added over 8%. Kia also gained 7.23%.

South Korea’s Kospi soared 2.49% to close at 3,748.37, small-cap Kosdaq closed flat at 865.41.

Shares of SK Inc., one of South Korea’s biggest technology conglomerates, fell over 5% after the Supreme Court on Thursday partially overturned a previous ruling on Chairman Chey Tae-won’s divorce settlement, local media reported.

Last year, a lower court ordered Chey to pay about $1 billion to his estranged wife in a high-profile divorce lawsuit.

Meanwhile, shares chipmaker SK Hynix ended 7.1% higher.

Australia’s ASX/S&P 200 rose to a new record after the country’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate jumped to a near four-year high in September at 4.5%. That compares with the 4.3% estimated by Reuters-polled economists and the 4.2% rate in August. The index added 0.86% to close at 9,068.4.

Meanwhile, employment rose by 14,900 in September, missing expectations for a 20,000 rise. The weak jobs reading paves the way for further interest rate cuts.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index jumped 1.27% to close at 48,277.74, while the Topix index added 0.62% to 3,203.42.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index closed flat at 25,888.51, while the Hang Seng Tech Index lost 1.18% to settle at 6,003.56. Mainland’s CSI 300 added 0.26% to close at 4,618.42.

Hong Kong-listed shares of Nio plunged 9% after Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund sued the Chinese electric vehicle maker for allegedly violating securities laws by inflating its revenues.

India’s benchmark Nifty 50 as well as the BSE Sensex were up 0.85% each as of 2 p.m. local time.