|
Tuesday 5th April 2011 |
Text too small? |
Australia has posted its first trade deficit in almost a year with a result in February that has surprised economists.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported on Tuesday that the Australian trade balance in February was a deficit of $205 (NZ$276.54) million, seasonally adjusted, from a downwardly revised surplus of $1.433 billion in January.
Economists' forecasts had been for a surplus of $1.1 billion in the month.
"It's a bit of surprise with the first deficit in nearly one year," St George Bank chief economist Besa Deda said.
The last time Australia posted a trade deficit was in March 2010, she said.
"We've been recording very large trade surpluses for some time and we did think that surpluses would narrow in coming months, but we weren't predicting the deficit."
Flooding in Queensland may have caused considerable volatility in the export numbers, Deda said.
"In January, coking coal and thermal coal exports were down... and I imagine volatility on that front (is) probably affecting the trade result."
NZPA
No comments yet
AIA - Analyst and media webcast for FY26 interim results
The Warehouse Group confirms leaner operating structure
SML - Synlait provides half year performance update
RYM - Refreshed strategy and new capital management framework
ENS - Clarification of Gina Tuzcet’s status
BGP - 4th Quarter Sales to 25 January 2026
Contact Energy 2026 Half Year Results Presentation
February 2nd Morning Report
VHP - Half year results announcement date and webcast details
Devon Funds Morning Note - 30 January 2026