U.S. trade deficit hits 7-month high
The U.S. trade deficit widened more than forecast in September to a sevenmonth high as imports expanded and the merchandise gap with China hit a record amid an escalating tariff war.
The gap for goods and services increased 1.3% from the prior month to $54 billion, Commerce Department data showed Friday. The median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg projected a deficit of $53.6 billion. Imports and exports each rose 1.5%.
The monthly report provides details around thirdquarter data released last week that showed trade imposed the biggest drag on growth in 33 years amid tariffs on China and counterlevies by the Asian nation. While President Trump is threatening more action, U.S. businesses already are facing higher prices and supply-chain disruptions as they rush to buy materials and other items.
Overall exports rose to $212.6 billion, including gains in petroleum products, gold, oil and aircraft. Imports increased to $266.6 billion, boosted by a variety of capital and commercial goods. The overall trade gap for goods increased to $76.3 billion, also a record and in line with the preliminary figure last week.
The unadjusted merchandise trade gap with China, the world’s secondbiggest economy, widened to $40.2 billion, from $38.6 billion.
American soybean exports fell 29% from the prior month to $1.79 billion, the lowest since February.
Analysts are monitoring the trade data to assess whether the tariff headwinds are starting to inflict more pain on the economy than they anticipated. The stronger dollar also is a potential hurdle for exports of American-made goods.
An index of U.S. manufacturing fell by more than forecast to a six-month low in October as a measure of export orders declined to the lowest since 2016, data from the Institute for Supply Management showed Thursday.
Gross domestic product expanded at a 3.5% pace in the July-through-September period, marking the best back-to-back quarters of growth since 2014. Net exports subtracted 1.78 percentage points from GDP growth.