The New Zealand Herald

Rising dairy prices help push exports to record

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New Zealand’s merchandis­e exports rose to their highest ever for an April month as increased dairy prices boosted the value of the country’s largest commodity for a seventh consecutiv­e month.

Exports rose 9.8 per cent to $4.75 billion in April, setting a new record for the month and marking the thirdhighe­st month ever recorded behind the $5b of exports in March 2014 and $4.9b in March 2015, according to Statistics New Zealand.

Dairy exports in April rose 35 per cent to $1.11b, driven by higher prices.

The country’s top five export commoditie­s all rose from the year earlier month. In order of their ranking, meat exports lifted 1 per cent to $630m, wood exports gained 18 per cent to a new record of $406m, fruit exports advanced 3.4 per cent to $444m and wine exports jumped 20 per cent to $136m.

Meanwhile, goods imports also advanced in April, lifting 4.9 per cent to $4.17b, setting a new record for an April month. The main movements were in intermedia­te goods, led by petroleum, and capital goods, led by mobile phones, portable computers and tractors, the statistics agency said.

The export gains led to a goods trade surplus of $578m in April, the largest monthly trade surplus since March 2015 and the largest April surplus since 2011, Stats NZ said.

The annual trade deficit reduced to $3.48b in April from $3.71b in March and $3.8b in February, which was the highest in almost eight years.

“NZ’s trade balance was stronger than expectatio­ns over April, with the $578m surplus higher than the market ($267m) and our ($50m) expectatio­ns,” ASB Bank economists said in a note.

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