International Trade — April | By the numbers
- Australia's trade surplus declined by $1.65bn in April to $8.8bn, which outperformed expectations for a sharper fall to $7.5bn. March's initially reported trade surplus of $10.6bn was revised down slightly to $10.45bn.
- Export earnings were down by 11.3% in April — their largest fall in percentage terms in a single month in 11 years — coming in at $37.51bn to swing the annual pace from 7.4% to -6.5%.
- Spending on imports continues to fall at pace with a 9.8% contraction coming through in April to $28.71bn, which left the level down 19.3% on a year earlier — its weakest outturn on record.
International Trade — April | The details
On the export side, the 11.3% fall (-$4.76bn) mostly centred on weakness in goods (-10.9% or -$3.83bn), though services also weakened sharply (-13.2% or -$0.92bn). Non-rural goods fell by 8.0% in the month (-$2.19bn) led by a heavy fall in iron ore (-9%) that looked to be mostly due to weaker prices. Non-monetary gold is highly volatile from month to month and it swung negative in April falling by $1.69bn after surging in the month prior ($2.47bn). Rural goods posted a modest rise of 0.9% to be up by 3.2% through the year in a sign that the effects of the drought on the sector were easing. Leading the decline on services exports was inbound tourism that plunged by 18.1% in April (-41.5%yr) reflecting the impact of the closure of Australia's international borders.
Turning to imports, the sharp fall in spending in April (-9.8% or -$3.11bn) was driven by a collapse from services (-42.5% or -$2.77bn) as overseas tourism vanished (-98.3%mth or -$2.75bn) in response to the travel ban implemented by the Federal government. Goods imports weakened by 1.3% in the month as intermediate goods (those used in production) declined by 4.9% to be down by 4.2% over the year, though there were gains from consumption goods (4.0%mth) and capital goods (4.3%mth).
International Trade — April | Insights