Canada posts $1.4B trade surplus for January

By The Canadian Press | March 5, 2021 | Last updated on March 5, 2021
2 min read
Canadian industries
iStockphoto.com / Ugurhan

January saw Canada post its first trade surplus since May 2019 as exports surged higher to start the year.

Statistics Canada said Friday that the surplus of $1.4 billion was the largest since July 2014 and compared with a revised deficit of nearly $2 billion in December.

Economists on average had expected a deficit of $1.4 billion for January, according to financial data firm Refinitiv.

The trade report follows a flash estimate by Statistics Canada earlier this week that real gross domestic product rose 0.5% in January following growth of 0.1% in December.

TD Bank economist Omar Abdelrahman said the strong international trade report joins a list of other indicators in suggesting a better-than-expected start to 2021 for the Canadian economy.

“It is important to highlight that part of January’s export strength is transitory, including sizable contributions from the volatile aircraft component and unusually high transactions of retail gold bars,” Abdelrahman wrote in a report.

“Still, excluding these components would leave exports (nominal) up more than 4% on the month. In particular, Canadian exports have recently been aided by strong momentum in global demand and prices for some commodities.”

Total exports rose 8.1% in January to $51.2 billion, with increases in all product sections, while in real or volume terms exports increased 5.1%.

Exports of aircraft and other transportation equipment and parts rose 72.3% in January as Statistics Canada said a Canadian airline, which it did not identify, retired a large number of aircraft, resulting in their export to the United States.

Meanwhile exports of consumer goods increased 11.6% in January, helped by higher exports of gold bars to the United States, and exports of energy products rose 5.9%, helped by both higher prices and higher volumes of crude oil exports for the month.

On the other side of the equation, imports increased 0.9% in January to $49.8 billion, while in real or volume terms they gained 1.0%.

Imports of energy products rose 20%, while imports of electronic and electrical equipment and parts increased 2.9%.

The overall trade surplus for the month came as Canada’s trade surplus with the United States more than doubled to $6.2 billion in January, the largest surplus since September 2008. Exports to the United States rose 11.3%, while imports from the United States edged up 0.4% to $31.0 billion.

Meanwhile, Canada’s trade deficit with countries other than the United States increased to $4.8 billion in January compared with $4.5 billion in December.

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