https://cdni.rt.com/files/2020.06/xxl/5ef5cf732030275917036d56.JPG

US trade deficit in goods unexpectedly widened in May versus forecasts for a narrower deficit, due to what analysts saw as a slide in exports mostly driven by oil.

The US international trade deficit in goods was $74.3 billion in May, up by $3.6 billion from $70.7 billion in April, the US Department of Commerce said in its advance estimate on Thursday.  

Analysts had expected that the deficit in May would shrink from April. Economists polled by MarketWatch had predicted a deficit of $66.5 billion, while the median forecasts from the consensus were for a $68.3 billion deficit, according to ShareCast.

As per the advance data from the Department of Commerce, total US exports of goods for May stood at $90.1 billion, which was down by $5.5 billion from April, while imports of goods for May were $164.4 billion, down by $1.9 billion from the imports in the previous month.

Exports of industrial supplies, which include crude oil and petroleum products, dropped by 11.8 percent month on month in May to $29.9 billion.    

“We’ll need to wait for the full report, though, to see if the oil numbers accounted for the all the shift. Ex-industrial supplies, exports and imports fell by 2.5% and 3.1% respectively, so the deficit dipped slightly,” Ian Shepherdson at Pantheon Macroeconomics told ShareCast.

According to Commerce Department data, US exports of crude oil in April – when oil prices hit their lowest in years – plunged to $3.205 billion from $5.185 billion in March.

Due to the Saudi-Russian oil price war in March and the lockdowns around the world to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, oil prices crashed in early March and continued sliding into April, even after Saudi Arabia and Russia decided to work again as OPEC+ to fix global oil supply and prices as demand was being crushed. WTI Crude even plunged into negative territory one day in April, a day before the front-month contract expired.

This article was originally published on Oilprice.com