The figures: As international orders came to a standstill following President Donald Trump’s announcement of broad, harsher tariffs, the U.S. goods deficit shrank significantly in April.
The Commerce Department’s preliminary assessment, which was made public on Friday, showed that the goods trade deficit shrank 46% to $87.6 billion in April from a record $162.3 billion in March. Since December 2023, the trade imbalance has never been smaller.
Businesses effectively ceased importing products in April after hoarding consumer items in the first quarter to evade the then-expected taxes.
According to a poll by Econoday Inc., the deficit was far smaller than the $143 billion shortfall that analysts had predicted.
The second quarter’s GDP growth will probably be boosted by declining imports.
Important information: Following a 5.7% increase in March, imports fell a record 19.8% in April.
Oliver Allen, a senior economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, stated that he believed the reduction was caused primarily by declines in computer equipment, pharmaceuticals, and precious metals.
In April, exports increased 3.4%, following a 2.3% increase in March.
The study also stated that wholesale inventories, which had increased by 0.4% in the previous month, were constant in May. Following a 1% increase in March, nonautomotive retail inventories increased by 0.3%.
In summary, businesses acted swiftly in the early months of this year to import items into the nation before new taxes were imposed on those imports.
The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow program predicts the economy will grow at a 3.8% rate in the April-June quarter, up from the previous estimate of 2.2%, after the data is released. Due to an increase in imports, the economy shrank by 0.2% in the first quarter.
Since data for May and June had not yet been available, economists argued it was too soon to make a firm determination.
Omair Sharif, founder of Inflation Insights, predicted that after the U.S. and China reached a temporary bilateral truce in mid-May, there may be a spike in imports in June. According to him, businesses would also deplete the inventory they had accumulated during the first quarter, which will hinder growth.
Considering the future: “GDP growth would be more robust if imports declined and inventories did not follow suit. However, Carl Weinberg, chief economist of High Frequency Economics, stated, “We will be shocked if inventories of goods do not drop significantly before the end of the second quarter.”
Market response: The 10-year Treasury yield, BX:TMUBMUSD10Y, was down somewhat to 4.221% in early trade on Friday morning, while stocks, SPX, were neutral.