Business World

Malaysia’s Nov. trade surplus plunges on slowing exports

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KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia’s trade surplus fell sharply in November after hitting its highest-ever trade surplus a month earlier, as exports lagged behind imports, government data showed on Friday.

November’s trade surplus stood at 7.6 billion ringgit ($1.84 billion), less than half the 16.3 billion ringgit registered a month earlier. Malaysia reports trade data in ringgit.

Total exports in November grew marginally by 1.6% from a year earlier, far short of the 6.6% forecast by economists, on a sharp drop in demand from China and a contractio­n in exports to the US of manufactur­ed goods.

Total exports to China, a major trading partner, grew 3.9% annually in November on sustained demand for chemicals and chemical products, petroleum products and liquefied natural gas (LNG), the Internatio­nal Trade and Industry Ministry said in a statement.

It was, however, a sharp drop from the 33% annual growth a month earlier.

Exports to the US contracted 3.6% on softer demand for manufactur­ed goods, especially in the electrical and electronic­s sector.

Shipments of manufactur­ed goods, which made up 83% of Malaysia’s November exports, rose 2.2% according to the ministry’s data.

Exports of mining goods rose 16.1% on higher prices of crude oil and LNG.

Low prices for palm oil and palm oil-based products led to a 17.6% decline in exports of agricultur­al goods in November.

The month also saw imports rising 5% year on year, a sharp drop from the 11.4% expansion in October, on slower expansion in local demand for intermedia­te goods while growth was marginal in the capital goods and consumptio­n goods categories. —

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