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NZ record smallest October trade deficit since mid-1990s

Published: Wed 27 Nov 2013 11:40 AM
NZ record smallest October trade deficit since mid-1990s, on record exports for month
Nov. 27 (BusinessDesk) – New Zealand posted its smallest October trade deficit since the mid-1990s as milk powder, butter and cheese shipments drove exports to a record for the month.
The trade deficit narrowed to $168 million last month, from $216 million in September, narrowing the annual trade gap to $1 billion from $1.55 billion, according to Statistics New Zealand. The trade figures compared to a forecast deficit of $350 million in the month and $1.14 billion in the year in a Reuters survey.
Exports rose by 23 percent, or $783 million, to $4.2 billion in October compared to the same month last year, of which $690 million reflected increased exports of milk powder, butter and cheese, which jumped by 85 percent to $1.5 billion.
In September, Fonterra Cooperative Group raised its forecast 2014 payout to a record $8.62, made up of a farmgate milk price of $8.30 and an unchanged dividend of 32 cents, citing continuing global demand for whole milk powder. The value of milk powder, butter and cheese climbed 4.6 percent in the 12 months through October to $12.2 million, making up 26 percent of total exports of $46.8 billion in the period.
China was the biggest destination for New Zealand’s exports last month, taking $1.1 billion worth, up 133 percent from a year earlier. Shipments to Australia fell 13 percent to $794 million. On an annual basis, Australia is still the largest market, taking $9.18 billion of exports, while China took $8.87 billion and the US took $4.1 billion.
“We expect to see this trend maintained over the coming months, as the strong rebound in agricultural (and in particular dairy) production since last summer's drought, coupled with strong commodity prices, is reflected in higher export revenues” said Anne Boniface, senior economist at Westpac Banking Corp.
Imports rose 5.7 percent to$4.4 billion, led by vehicles, parts and accessories.
China was the largest source of imports, rising 9.2 percent to $797 million in the month and 4.4 percent to $8.1 billion in the year. Imports from Australia fell 1.9 percent to $613 million and fell 7.8 percent to $6.6 billion in the year. Imports from the US rose 11 percent to $408 million in October from a year earlier and fell 5 percent to $4.4 billion in the year.
(BusinessDesk)

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