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US trade deficit grows as oil exports drop in May | US trade deficit grows as oil exports drop in May |
(32 minutes later) | |
The US' trade deficit in goods unexpectedly widened in May , bucking forecasts for a narrower deficit, due to what analysts saw as a slide in exports, mostly driven by oil. | |
The US international trade deficit in goods was $74.3 billion in May, up by $3.6 billion from $70.7 billion in April, the US Department of Commerce said in its advance estimate on Thursday. | The US international trade deficit in goods was $74.3 billion in May, up by $3.6 billion from $70.7 billion in April, the US Department of Commerce said in its advance estimate on Thursday. |
Analysts had expected that the deficit in May would shrink from April. Economists polled by MarketWatch had predicted a deficit of $66.5 billion, while the median forecasts from the consensus were for a $68.3 billion deficit, according to ShareCast. | Analysts had expected that the deficit in May would shrink from April. Economists polled by MarketWatch had predicted a deficit of $66.5 billion, while the median forecasts from the consensus were for a $68.3 billion deficit, according to ShareCast. |
As per the advance data from the Department of Commerce, total US exports of goods for May stood at $90.1 billion, which was down by $5.5 billion from April, while imports of goods for May were $164.4 billion, down by $1.9 billion from the imports in the previous month. | As per the advance data from the Department of Commerce, total US exports of goods for May stood at $90.1 billion, which was down by $5.5 billion from April, while imports of goods for May were $164.4 billion, down by $1.9 billion from the imports in the previous month. |
Exports of industrial supplies, which include crude oil and petroleum products, dropped by 11.8 percent month on month in May to $29.9 billion. | Exports of industrial supplies, which include crude oil and petroleum products, dropped by 11.8 percent month on month in May to $29.9 billion. |
“We’ll need to wait for the full report, though, to see if the oil numbers accounted for the all the shift. Ex-industrial supplies, exports and imports fell by 2.5% and 3.1% respectively, so the deficit dipped slightly,” Ian Shepherdson at Pantheon Macroeconomics told ShareCast. | “We’ll need to wait for the full report, though, to see if the oil numbers accounted for the all the shift. Ex-industrial supplies, exports and imports fell by 2.5% and 3.1% respectively, so the deficit dipped slightly,” Ian Shepherdson at Pantheon Macroeconomics told ShareCast. |
According to Commerce Department data, US exports of crude oil in April – when oil prices hit their lowest in years – plunged to $3.205 billion from $5.185 billion in March. | According to Commerce Department data, US exports of crude oil in April – when oil prices hit their lowest in years – plunged to $3.205 billion from $5.185 billion in March. |
Due to the Saudi-Russian oil price war in March and the lockdowns around the world to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, oil prices crashed in early March and continued sliding into April, even after Saudi Arabia and Russia decided to work again as OPEC+ to fix global oil supply and prices as demand was being crushed. WTI Crude even plunged into negative territory one day in April, a day before the front-month contract expired. | Due to the Saudi-Russian oil price war in March and the lockdowns around the world to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, oil prices crashed in early March and continued sliding into April, even after Saudi Arabia and Russia decided to work again as OPEC+ to fix global oil supply and prices as demand was being crushed. WTI Crude even plunged into negative territory one day in April, a day before the front-month contract expired. |
This article was originally published on Oilprice.com | This article was originally published on Oilprice.com |
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