U.S. goods trade gap hits record; pending home sales slip
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[December 30, 2021] By
Dan Burns
(Reuters) - The U.S. trade deficit in goods
mushroomed to the widest ever in November as imports of consumer goods
shot to a record ahead of the second straight COVID-distorted holiday
shopping season along with industrial supplies, while exports slipped
after a historic gain a month earlier.
The goods trade gap reported Wednesday by the Commerce Department is
likely to remain historically high as long as the coronavirus pandemic
continues, economists said. The emergence of the fast-spreading Omicron
variant of COVID-19 that has driven U.S. and global caseloads to a
record this week may exacerbate it further in the near term if it limits
American consumers' spending on services and restokes demand for
imported goods.
Omicron also stands as a downside risk in the housing market. A reading
of pending home sales also out Wednesday showed an unexpected drop in
November, and while that data largely predated Omicron's ascendance in
the United States, the highly contagious new variant could further limit
home sales in the near term, the National Association of Realtors (NAR)
said.
The goods trade deficit widened last month by 17.5% to $97.8 billion
from $83.2 billion in October, Census Bureau data showed. That exceeds
the previous record deficit set in September of $97 billion and may damp
optimism that trade might finally add to U.S. economic growth this
quarter for the first time in more than a year.
Imports rose by 4.7% with industrial supplies leading the way with an
increase of $5.7 billion to $63.2 billion, followed by consumer goods
rising by $2.9 billion to just shy of $67 billion as retailers rushed to
fill store shelves ahead of Christmas. Both were record highs.
"The emergence of the Omicron variant may further ignite demand for
imported goods if services activity is restricted" in the first quarter
of 2022, Nancy Vanden Houten, lead economist at Oxford Economics, wrote
after Wednesday's report.
Goods exports, meanwhile, declined 2.1%, with weakness across the board
outside of a 4.3% increase in food exports. The drop was led by declines
of $1.4 billion in industrial supplies in and $1.3 billion in capital
goods.
The worldwide surge of coronoavirus cases to a record in recent days -
including a record U.S. caseload - may weigh on global demand in the
months ahead, risking an even wider trade gap, Vanden Houten said.
(Graphic: U.S. goods trade deficit hits a record, https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/znvneldmbpl/chart.png)
The so-called Advance Indicators report also showed wholesale
inventories climbed 1.2% last month, while retail inventories increased
2.0%. Retail inventories, excluding autos, which go into the calculation
of gross domestic product, edged up by 1.3% to $465.2 billion, the
latest in a string of record-high readings.
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A Maersk Line container ship prepares to depart port in Long Beach,
California, U.S. July 16, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The economy grew at a 2.3% annualized rate in the third quarter, a step-down
from earlier in the year but activity has rebounded in the fourth quarter with a
consensus among economists building around a growth rate of 6% to 7% in the
final three months of 2021.
Trade has been a drag on gross domestic product growth for five straight
quarters, while inventories added to output in the third quarter.
Earlier this month, the Commerce Department reported a sharp reduction in the
overall trade deficit - including services - for October, which had generated
some optimism that trade may contribute to the improvement in output in the
final quarter of the year. The big reversal to a record goods trade gap in
November may prompt a rethinking of that.
Economists at Action Economics have dialed back their fourth-quarter GDP growth
estimate to 6.5% from 7.0%, with exports now seen subtracting from growth rather
than adding to it as had been previously expected. Economists at JPMorgan and
Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, left their estimates intact at 7%.
Meanwhile, contracts to buy U.S. previously owned homes fell unexpectedly in
November as limited housing stock and lofty prices crimped activity, and the
explosion of new coronavirus cases poses a risk to the housing market headed
into 2022.
NAR said its Pending Home Sales Index, based on signed contracts, fell 2.2% last
month to 122.4. Pending home sales were lower in all four regions.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast contracts, which typically become
final sales after a month or two, would rise 0.5% in November.
"There was less pending home sales action this time around, which I would
ascribe to low housing supply, but also to buyers being hesitant about home
prices," said Lawrence Yun, NAR's chief economist.
Looking ahead, Yun said Omicron poses a risk to the housing market's
performance, as buyers and sellers are sidelined, and home construction is
delayed.
(Reporting by Dan Burns; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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