WASHINGTON, Nov 3 — The US trade gap widened in September after five straight months of decline, government data showed today, on cooling food and energy exports while imports of products like semiconductors and consumer goods picked up.
Although companies had rushed to replenish depleted inventories to meet strong demand from consumers, analysts have cautioned that domestic demand in the United States would likely weaken while a strong dollar and slowing global growth bog down exports.
In September, the overall trade deficit widened to US$73.3 billion (RM347 billion), up from a revised US$65.7 billion figure in August, Commerce Department data showed.
The expansion was above analyst expectations and came as exports dipped to US$258 billion on a drop in industrial supplies such as crude oil and food like soybeans.
Imports rose to US$331.3 billion, helped by shipments of semiconductors and consumer goods including cell phones.
The US deficit with China decreased US$1.4 billion to US$32.1 billion in September, data showed.
While there has been strong demand from US consumers, soaring inflation has raised concerns that shoppers will pull back, causing firms to become more cautious.
The US Federal Reserve has been raising interest rates aggressively to cool the economy and bring down surging prices — announcing a fourth straight bumper rate hike yesterday — and many families have had to spend a greater share of their incomes on staple goods.
Higher interest rates have also strengthened the US dollar, making American goods relatively more expensive, which could weigh on exports.
“Looking ahead, trade flows are likely to weaken,” said economist Rubeela Farooqi of High Frequency Economics in an analysis. — AFP