Thursday, February 14, 2008

U.S. December Trade Gap Narrows More Than Forecast

(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. trade deficit narrowed more than forecast in December as exports reached record levels and Americans spent less on imported autos and goods from China.

The gap between imports and exports shrank 6.9 percent, the biggest decrease in more than a year, to $58.8 billion from $63.1 billion in November, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The deficit for all of 2007 decreased for the first time in six years.

A weaker dollar and expansion of emerging economies are feeding overseas sales for U.S.-made goods and may forestall a deeper slump at U.S. manufacturers. The narrowing deficit is one of the few remaining bright spots for the economy and will probably lead the government to increase its estimate of fourth- quarter gross domestic product later this month.

``The trade balance is going to continue to be a support for the economy,'' said David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York. ``The drop in imports is probably consistent with the view the domestic economy is turning quite soft.''

Economists had forecast the gap would narrow to $61.5 billion, according to the median of 76 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates of the deficit ranged from $57 billion to $66.5 billion.

The dollar, which had fallen against the euro earlier today, stayed lower after the report. It traded at $1.4609 per euro at 8:37 a.m. in New York, from $1.4573 late yesterday. The U.S. currency was little changed versus the yen, at 108.30 yen per dollar.

2007 Deficit Shrinks

For all of last year, the deficit shrank 6.2 percent to $711.6 billion, the biggest decrease since 1991. Last year was the first time the trade gap narrowed since 2001.

Exports rose 1.5 percent to $144.3 billion in December, setting a record for a 10th straight month and reflecting more demand for U.S. made capital equipment and industrial supplies. For the year, exports rose 12 percent to a record $1.622 trillion.

Imports in December declined 1.1 percent to $203.1 billion, reflecting lower demand for foreign-made autos, consumer goods, food and capital equipment.

Also contributing to the drop in imports was a 14 percent decline in purchases from China, which helped shrink the month's trade gap with the Asian nation 22 percent to $18.8 billion. Petroleum imports rose 4.2 percent to a record $36 billion as the average price rose to $82.76 a barrel, also the highest monthly average ever. Prices increased in late December and early January and may push up the value of imports for the January report. They have since declined.

Fourth-Quarter Growth

Today's report may cause the Commerce Department to revise its estimate of fourth-quarter economic growth higher. The government projected last month that the trade gap narrowed to a $521 billion annual pace in the last three months of 2007. For all of last year, trade contributed 0.55 percentage point to growth, the most since 1991.

The government will release a revised estimate of the expansion for the last three months of 2007 on Feb. 28.

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson are scheduled to testify to the Senate Banking Committee later today on the state of the U.S. expansion. Central bank policy makers have forecast the economy will avoid a recession.

``The Fed's policy actions should help to promote a pickup in growth over time,'' Fed Bank of San Francisco President Janet Yellen said in a speech on Feb. 12. ``I consider it most probable that the U.S. economy will experience slow growth, and not outright recession, in coming quarters.''

Fed's Rate Cuts

The Fed's Open Market Committee is scheduled to next vote on interest-rate policy on March 18. Policy makers lowered the benchmark rate by three-quarters of a percentage point in an emergency decision announced Jan. 22 and followed that with a half-point cut at the scheduled Jan. 29-30 meeting.

After eliminating the influence of prices, the trade deficit decreased to $49.3 billion from $53.6 billion. This is the figure the government uses in calculating GDP.

For the year, the trade deficit with China, the second- largest U.S. trading partner after Canada, increased 10 percent to a record $256.3 billion.

The gap with China is a political sticking point for the U.S. and other countries.

Group of Seven policy makers, meeting in Tokyo last weekend, said China should do more to defuse global trade tensions by allowing the yuan to climb against the dollar and other currencies. The G-7 also forecast the U.S. economy may slow further, eroding global growth.
 

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