International Trade — July | By the numbers
- The trade surplus declined by $709m in July to $A7.268bn, though this was higher than the market's forecast for $7.0bn. June's trade surplus was revised down from $8.036bn to $7.977bn.
- Export earnings increased by 0.6% in the month (+$270m) to $A42.538bn, with annual growth rising from 15.3% to 15.9% (prior rev: +1.4%m/m, +15.3%Y/Y)
- Import expenditure rebounded by 2.9% in July (+$979m) to $A35.270bn coming off a 3.5% fall in June, which swung the annual pace from -1.5% to +0.9%.
International Trade — July | The details
On the exports side, total earnings lifted only modestly in July by 0.6%, or by $270m in nominal $AUD terms. The breakdown showed this was driven by the volatile non-monetary gold component (+66%, $1.09bn). This was moderated mostly by a 3% decline (-$807m) in non-rural goods that was centred on weakness in commodities with; coal -$571m, metals -$415m and metal ores -$89m, with the ABS's estimates pointing to softness from prices and volumes. However, LNG was still going strongly with earnings up by $214m on strength in prices and volumes. Meanwhile, rural goods fell by 1% (-$42m) in the month. Services exports were little changed in July rising by $38m.
For imports, the 2.9% rise equated to a nominal increase in expenditure of $979m, which also likely includes some pass-through from a weaker Australian dollar in 2019. The increases were across; intermediate goods (driven by higher oil prices) (+5%, $541m), consumption goods (mainly due to vehicles) (+4%, $378m), and non-monetary gold (+29%, $177m). Some offset came from capital goods (-1%, $87m) and services 0%, -$30m).
International Trade — July | Insights
This was another very strong monthly trade surplus to start Q3 and was around $1.0bn above the average from Q2. However, the recent retracement in commodity prices is expected to see trade surpluses moderate in the months ahead, as well as the impact of a weaker dollar lifting import prices. From a voulme perspective, resources exports are expected to add notably to economic activity over the second half of 2019.