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Friday, February 26, 2016

US Trade Gap Widened In January

In a report pointing to economic weakness, the nation's trade gap in goods widened 1.2 percent in January to $62.2 billion as exports fell 2.9 percent to offset a 1.5 percent fall in imports (imports are a subtraction in the national accounts). Exports fell across the board including industrial supplies at minus 3.0 percent in the month and capital goods down 2.3 percent. The decline in imports included a steep 6.8 percent drop in industrial supplies and a 2.4 percent decline for capital goods. The declines in industrial supplies are tied in part to low prices for oil and petroleum products while the declines in capital goods points to lack of global confidence in the business climate and lack of business investment in global productivity. This report represents the goods portion of the monthly international trade report which will be posted next Friday.

Recent History Of This Indicator:
The international trade in goods is expected to narrow slightly in January to an advance reading of $61.0 billion. Imports of goods have been steady with gains for autos offsetting declines for consumer goods. But goods exports have been clearly weak, especially for capital goods in a trend that points to lack of confidence in the outlook among foreign businesses and lack of investment in global productivity.

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