International Trade — June | By the numbers
- Australia's trade surplus advanced by $861.0m in June to $8.202bn, though this was weaker than $8.8bn level expected, while May's surplus was revised sharply lower to $7.341bn from $8.025bn.
- Export earnings lifted by 3.5%m/m to $36.186bn after falling by 6.7% in May (revised from -4.3%). The decline in annual terms moderated to -14.9% from -16.9%.
- Import spending ended a run of 5 straight monthly declines — the steepest of those coming in May (-6.7%) — with a 1.3% increase in June to $27.984bn. This saw the contraction over the year slow to -19.3% from a record low in May of -23.2%.
International Trade — June | The details
The trade surplus in June came in at $8.202bn after surpluses of $7.864bn in April and $7.341bn in May. After seasonal adjustments are applied, the ABS reported that its preliminary estimate for the trade surplus in the June quarter was $24.086bn; an increase of $5.033bn (+26.4%) from Q1.
On exports, total earnings recovered by 3.5% in June (or $1.219bn) to $36.186bn, albeit after falling by 16.9% over April-May (-$3.559bn). There were broad-based gains in earnings in June led by non-monetary gold (+$687.0m) and by services (+$260.0m) on the back of spending by overseas students still in Australia. Non-rural goods lifted by $144.0m, though this obscured a large increase from iron ore exports ($941.0m) as other mineral fuels (LNG) (-$788.0m) and coal (-$456.0m) were hit by weaker prices. Rural goods firmed by $125.0m due to increased demand for cereals.
On exports, total earnings recovered by 3.5% in June (or $1.219bn) to $36.186bn, albeit after falling by 16.9% over April-May (-$3.559bn). There were broad-based gains in earnings in June led by non-monetary gold (+$687.0m) and by services (+$260.0m) on the back of spending by overseas students still in Australia. Non-rural goods lifted by $144.0m, though this obscured a large increase from iron ore exports ($941.0m) as other mineral fuels (LNG) (-$788.0m) and coal (-$456.0m) were hit by weaker prices. Rural goods firmed by $125.0m due to increased demand for cereals.
Import spending lifted by 1.3% in June ($358.0m) to $27.984bn, though weak domestic demand conditions into the pandemic resulted in a plunge of 22.6% (-$8.056bn) over the preceding 5-month period. The modest lift in June was driven by a $318.0m increase in goods spending, with consumption goods up by $549.0m and intermediate goods lifting by $429.0m. These increases were moderated by weakness from capital goods (-$125.0m) and non-monetary gold (-$534.0m). Services imports remain very low at $3.879bn reflecting the impact of the overseas travel ban due to the pandemic.
International Trade — June | Insights