Daily Sabah (Turkey)

July exports hit all-time high as 12-month sales exceed $200B threshold

Industry representa­tives have been voicing optimism about export performanc­e in the second half of the year, boosted by recovery among Turkey’s trading partners and vaccinatio­n campaigns

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TURKISH exporters managed to achieve their best July sales to date, while the nation’s 12-month rolling foreign sales also exceeded a threshold of $200 billion (TL 1.68 trillion) for the first time, Trade Minister Mehmet Muş announced Monday.

The industry representa­tives have been voicing optimism about performanc­e in the second half of the year, despite many challenges brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Exports totaled $16.4 billion last month, posting a 10% year-on-year increase, Muş told a meeting in the capital Ankara to announce preliminar­y figures.

The 12-month rolling export figure in July reached $210.5 billion, the minister said, exceeding the long-awaited $200 billion for the first time in history.

TURKISH exporters managed to achieve their best July sales to date, while the nation’s 12-month rolling foreign sales also exceeded a threshold of $200 billion (TL 1.68 trillion) for the first time, Trade Minister Mehmet Muş announced yesterday.

Industry representa­tives have been voicing optimism about performanc­e in the second half of the year despite many challenges brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Exports totaled $16.4 billion last month, posting a 10% year-on-year increase, Muş told a meeting in the capital Ankara to announce preliminar­y figures.

“The said amount marks the highest July export to date,” the minister noted.

The 12-month rolling export figure in July reached $210.5 billion, he stressed, exceeding the long-awaited $200 billion for the first time in history.

Imports also surged 17% to $20.7 billion in the same period, prompting the trade deficit to increase 52.5% to $4.3 billion, the data showed.

Analysts had said the demand would likely further rebound in the third quarter as pandemic-related restrictio­ns are eased.

Exports have been boosted by recovery among Turkey’s trading partners and the country’s successful vaccinatio­n program.

Muş stressed the impact of the global recovery and the vaccinatio­n campaigns as well as the positive effects of the developmen­ts in the country’s prominent markets, including the eurozone, the U.K. and the U.S.

The January-July sales came in at

$121.4 billion, surging 35% from the same period a year ago, Muş said.

“If we compare the seven-month figure with the pre-pandemic period (January-July 2019), this also marked a 16.4% increase,” he added.

Turkish Exporters’ Assembly (TİM) Chairperso­n İsmail Gülle expressed optimism the country would push ahead toward $300 billion, a figure that he said could be reached in as little as five years.

Referring to the 12-month rolling exports, Gülle said “we have managed to exceed not only 2021-end target of $184 billion but also the $198 billion target set for 2022.” “We have our eyes on the 2023 goal now,” he noted.

Imports from January through July, jumped 26% on an annual basis to $146.8 billion, the data showed.

The export-to-import coverage ratio went up 5.6 percentage points to 82.7% during the same period, Muş noted.

The foreign trade deficit narrowed 5% to $25.5 billion in the first seven months.

The pandemic led to a 6.26% drop in 2020 exports as Turkey closed the year with $169.5 billion in foreign sales, exceeding the target of $165.9 billion in the medium-term program.

Imports were up 4.3% to reach $219.4 billion. The foreign trade gap widened by 69.12% to $49.9 billion.

In parallel to the rise in sales, the number of companies making exports also increased by 10% from January through July to reach nearly 80,000, said the minister.

The steel industry was the brightest spot in July, managing to boost its sales by as much as $709 million from a year ago, said Gülle, while the traditiona­l leader, the automotive industry, topped the list among sectors as it performed $2 billion worth of sales in July.

The chemicals sector saw its exports surge $339 million, in addition to a $176 million and $109 million increase in ferrous and non-ferrous metals and jewelry exports, respective­ly.

Germany remained the top market as sales hit $1.4 billion, followed by the U.S. with $1 billion and the U.K. with $983 million, the data showed.

Exports to Italy saw the highest increase with $171 million, followed by a $155 million and a $141 million surge in sales to Spain and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Sales to the European Union, where almost half of the nation’s exports go, were up 13% to $7 billion.

The African continent received $1.4 billion worth of Turkish goods, followed by $1.3 billion of exports made to the Middle East and $1.2 billion sent to North America.

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 ??  ?? Containers carrying traded goods wait at the Port of Ambarlı, İstanbul, Turkey, July 17, 2020.
Containers carrying traded goods wait at the Port of Ambarlı, İstanbul, Turkey, July 17, 2020.

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