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U.S. trade deficit hits record high in February

The U.S. trade deficit surged to a record high in February as the nation’s economic activity rebounded more quickly than that of its global rivals.

 This could remain elevated this year, with massive fiscal stimulus expected to spur the fastest growth in nearly four decades.

 The economy is roaring as increased COVID-19 vaccinations and the White House’s $1.9 trillion pandemic rescue package boost domestic demand, a chunk of which is being satiated with imports.

 The aggressive government intervention and the Federal Reserve’s ultra-easy monetary policy have charted a robust growth path for the economy. 

The trade deficit jumped 4.8 per cent to a record $71.1 billion in February, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday.

 Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a $70.5 billion deficit.

 The goods trade gap was also the highest on record.

 Imports slipped 0.7 per cent to $258.3 billion.

 Goods imports fell 0.9 per cent to $219.1 billion.

 The drop likely reflected supply-chain constraints, rather than weak domestic demand.

 Indeed, imports of capital goods hit a record high, while those of industrial supplies and materials were the highest since October 2018. 

“Cargo ships have been forced to anchor outside the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports, where about a third of goods imports come through.

 “This is as the ports struggle to unload the incoming ships,’’ said Jay Bryson, chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte, North Carolina.

 The U.S. in February recorded its first petroleum deficit since December 2019, likely because of higher crude prices.

 Exports dropped 2.6 per cent to $187.3 billion.

 Exports of goods tumbled 3.5 per cent to $131.1 billion, likely hurt by unseasonably cold weather across large parts of the country. 

When adjusted for inflation, the goods trade deficit shot up to a record $99.1 billion in February from $96.1 billion in January.

 The so-called real trade deficit is running well above the average for the October-December period.

 That suggests trade could subtract from GDP growth in the first quarter, which would be the third straight quarterly drag.

 But that is unlikely to have an impact on first-quarter GDP growth estimates, currently as high as a 10 per cent annualised rate. 

The economy grew at a 4.3 per cent pace in the fourth quarter.

 Economists expect growth this year could top seven per cent, which would be the fastest since 1984.

 The economy contracted 3.5 per cent in 2020, the worst performance in 74 years.

 The International Monetary Fund is forecasting the global economy to expand by six per cent this year, driven primarily by the U.S. economy, which the fund estimated would grow by 6.4 per cent.

 From the labour market to manufacturing and the hard-hit services industries, activity accelerated sharply in March.

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