Nippon Express USA: Home
United States
Home    Contact Us    Quotation    Resources    Site Map
 
GO
GO
  Home » Resources » Industry News » March 11, 2010
 
About Us
Services
Case Studies
Logistics Tools
Locations
Industry News
 
U.S. Trade Gap Narrows on Falling Imports
 

March 11, 2010 — For the first time in five months, the U.S. trade deficit narrowed unexpectedly in January. the Commerce Department reported on March 11. The trade deficit shrank to a seasonally adjusted $37.3 billion, down from a revised $39.9 billion in December.

Imports dropped 1.7% to $180 billion, while exports slipped 0.3% to $142.7 billion.

U.S. trade volume with the rest of the world declined for the first time since August, by 1.1% from December.

The decrease in the trade deficit was partly due to a decline in crude oil imports to their weekest level since February 1999, at 245 million barrels. The trade gap in petroleum products continued to weigh heavily on the trade balance, though the deficit narrowed to $22.7 billion in January from $23.6 billion the previous month.

The average price of imported oil jumped to $73.89, its highest peak since October 2008.

In unadjusted data, the trade deficit with Canada, the largest U.S. trading partner, grew to $3.9 billion, marking the biggest gap since October 2008.

The trade deficit with China increased slightly, to $18.3 billion from $18.1 billion in December.

The deficit with two important trading partners narrowed to its lowest level since May, at $3.3 billion with Japan and $2.8 billion with European Union.




Source: Agence France-Presse, 2010

  Printable Version
  © 2010 Nippon Express USA Terms of use | Quality & Security
It is