The Telegram (St. John's)

Canada posts January trade surplus as imports plunge

- PROMIT MUKHERJEE ISMAIL SHAKIL

OTTAWA — Canada recorded a bigger than expected trade surplus of $496 million in January, as imports plunged to a nearly two-year low while exports fell at a slower pace, data showed on Thursday.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast a $100-million surplus in the month. December’s trade deficit was revised to $863 million from a deficit of $312 million initially reported, Statistics Canada said.

The Canadian dollar firmed slightly after the numbers were released with the local currency trading 0.23 per cent stronger at 1.3483 to the U.S. dollar.

Total imports fell 3.8 per cent to its lowest level since February 2022, largely on consumer goods and motor vehicles, Statistics Canada said. By volume, imports were down 4.1 per cent in the month.

Exports declined 1.7 per cent, a third consecutiv­e monthly fall, mainly on metal and non-metallic mineral products as well as aircraft and other transporta­tion equipment and parts.

Total exports fell 1.8 per cent by volume.

Thursday’s trade report is broadly in line with the Bank of Canada’s expectatio­ns for high borrowing costs to keep consumer spending restrained in the near term, impacting import levels, while soft foreign demand weighs on exports.

Both imports and exports are projected to pick up in the second half of 2024.

The central bank held its key overnight rate at a 22year high of five per cent for the fifth time in a row on Wednesday and said it was too early to consider a cut.

The bank has kept interest rates on hold since July in its efforts to cool inflation.

Canada’s trading activity slowed with the United States, which buys more than three quarters of its total exports and accounts for over 60 per cent of its total imports and surplus widened slightly.

Imports decreased by 1.7 per cent in January, partly because of lower imports of motor vehicles and parts and pharmaceut­ical products while exports fell one per cent led by lower exports of aircrafts.

Its trading activity with other countries also slowed in January, Statistics Canada said, adding its deficit with them narrowed.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Toronto skyline stands on the waterfront. Total imports fell 3.8 per cent to its lowest level since February 2022, largely on consumer goods and motor vehicles.
REUTERS The Toronto skyline stands on the waterfront. Total imports fell 3.8 per cent to its lowest level since February 2022, largely on consumer goods and motor vehicles.

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