Sharp improvement in agricultural exports is an isolated highlight of an
otherwise subdued August report on goods trade that shows continued
weakness overall for exports and limited results for imports. August's
goods deficit totaled $72.8 billion which is slightly better than
Econoday's consensus for $73.4 billion and hints at possible improvement
for third-quarter net exports. Yet exports overall managed only a 0.1
percent gain in the month with the year-on-year rate in the negative
column at minus 0.3 percent. Imports did rise 0.3 percent in the month
to reverse the prior month's 0.3 percent decline but this yearly rate is
also in the negative column at minus 1.3 percent.
Exports of
foods, feeds & beverages jumped 4.2 percent in the month to lift
this yearly rate to plus 8.4 percent in results that will raise talk of
Chinese buying. Note that country breakdowns for August won't be
available until next week's international trade report that will also
include data on cross-border services trade. Exports of industrial
supplies also rose in August as did vehicle exports, though exports of
capital goods fell 3.1 percent in a negative sign for general business
investment offset, however, by a 3.2 percent rise in imports of capital
goods.
Outside of capital goods there's little sign that
domestic demand is strengthening on the import side of the ledger that
also shows sharp declines for industrial supplies and vehicles. Yet
imports of consumer goods, which are the Achilles' heel for the US trade
balance, did rise 2.6 percent in the month for a year-on-year gain of
6.5 percent.
Global trade has been slowing and may well be in
contraction right now, a risk underscored convincingly by the
year-on-year declines in both US imports and exports. The Federal
Reserve is concentrated on the risk of slowing global growth, and this
report offers arguments for the doves and their push for further rate
cuts.
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