Economic Calendar

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Trade Deficit Falls to Five-Year Low as Oil Imports Collapse

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Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Wachovia Corporation | Jan 13 09 15:02 GMT |

The trade deficit came out much smaller than expected, dropping to a five-year low in November. A collapse in the value of oil imports explains much of the decline. However, non-oil imports weakened sharply as well, reflecting weakness in the domestic economy. Meanwhile, foreign recessions are causing exports to decline.

Collapse in Oil Imports Drives Trade Deficit Lower

  • The trade deficit came out much smaller than expected, largely because the value of oil imports fell sharply.
  • The collapse in the price of petroleum since July finally showed up in the nation's import bill. That said, non-oil imports were also off more than $10 billion, reflecting weakness in the domestic economy.

Global Recession Pulling Exports Lower

  • The trade deficit would have narrowed even further had exports not dropped $7.6 billion. Broad-based declines in exports reflect the effects of the global recession.
  • Net exports have propped up real GDP growth over the past year or so. By our reckoning, however, net exports made very little contribution to growth in the fourth quarter.

Wachovia Corporation
http://www.wachovia.com

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