Goods consumption is likely flat or down, people are just paying more
This article first appeared on SchiffGold.
The December Trade Deficit increased after a major drop in November. The total came in at $67B which was 10% greater than Novembers $61B, but is well below the 6-month high from October of $77B. It is also below the $79B Trade Deficit from December 2021.
As shown below, the Trade Deficit has definitely come down quite a bit since the string of monthly deficits that all exceeded $80B from January to June of 2022.
The table below provides detail.
Monthly Trade Deficit
Looking at Trailing Twelve Month:
Similar to the recent jobs report, the Trade Deficit might initially signal a strengthening economy where Exports are growing and Imports are falling. While the BLS Jobs numbers made little sense given the economic environment, the improving Trade Deficit could be explained by the fall in the dollar along with a rise in global inflation.
As the dollar falls in value, US exports become cheaper to the rest of the world. Similarly, Imports become more expensive. However, as shown below, the fact that all categories have surged by such an incredible margin (15%+) in a weakening economy suggests that less goods are being consumed for significantly more. Even if goods consumption remained flat in 2022 (very unlikely compared to 2021), then the Trade Deficit would indicate global inflation well into the double digits. Double digit inflation seems like the most likely explanation for the large growth.
Current Value compared to 1 month ago and 1 year ago | Trailing Twelve Month (TTM) Comparison | |||||||||
Category | Dec 2022 | Nov 2022 | Dec 2021 | MoM % Change | YoY % Change | TTM Ending | TTM Ending | TTM Ending | TTM % Change | TTM % Change |
Export | ||||||||||
Goods | 168.1 | 171.1 | 159.4 | -1.7% | 5.5% | 2,085.6 | 1,761.4 | 1,432.2 | 18.4% | 45.6% |
Services | 82.0 | 81.3 | 73.1 | 0.9% | 12.2% | 924.2 | 795.3 | 726.4 | 16.2% | 27.2% |
Total | 250.2 | 252.3 | 232.4 | -0.9% | 7.6% | 3,009.7 | 2,556.6 | 2,158.7 | 17.7% | 39.4% |
Import | ||||||||||
Goods | -258.8 | -254.3 | -259.9 | 1.8% | -0.4% | -3,277.3 | -2,851.7 | -2,346.1 | 14.9% | 39.7% |
Services | -58.8 | -59.1 | -51.4 | -0.5% | 14.4% | -680.5 | -550.0 | -466.5 | 23.7% | 45.9% |
Total | -317.6 | -313.4 | -311.3 | 1.3% | 2.0% | -3,957.8 | -3,401.7 | -2,812.6 | 16.3% | 40.7% |
Net | ||||||||||
Goods | -90.6 | -83.2 | -100.5 | 8.9% | -9.8% | -1,191.8 | -1,090.3 | -913.9 | 9.3% | 30.4% |
Services | 23.2 | 22.2 | 21.7 | 4.7% | 7.2% | 243.7 | 245.2 | 259.9 | -0.6% | -6.2% |
Total | -67.4 | -61.0 | -78.9 | 10.5% | -14.5% | -948.1 | -845.0 | -654.0 | 12.2% | 45.0% |
Data as of: Dec 2022. Figures in Billions of $. |
Zooming out and focusing on the net numbers shows the longer-term trend. The massive Deficit spike in March fully reversed, but it has now come back in line with the downward trend that had been ongoing before Covid.
The chart below zooms in on the Services Surplus to show the wild ride it has been on in recent months. It compares Net Services to Total Exported Services to show relative size. After hovering near 35% since 2013, it dropped below 30% in July last year. It has rebounded to 28.3% in the latest month, up from 24.6%, which is another factor helping reduce the Trade Deficit.
To put it all together and remove some of the noise, the next plot below shows the Trailing Twelve Month (TTM) values for each month (i.e., each period represents the summation of the previous 12-months).
Although the TTM Net Trade Deficit is near historical highs, it can be put in perspective by comparing the value to US GDP. As the chart below shows, the current records are still below the 2006 highs before the Great Financial Crisis.
The current 3.63% is moving back down, but is still well above the 2.5% from before Covid.
The chart below shows the YTD values. Because the latest month is December, these are full year figures. 2022 is well above prior years by a significant margin. As mentioned above, most or even all of this increase could be directly tied to the global rise in inflation.
The Trade Deficit represents how much paper the US is trading for physical goods. The Deficit sits near all-time highs, which means the US dollar continues to be sent abroad in record amounts. The Trade Deficit has improved in recent months, but this is likely more due to the falling dollar and less from a burgeoning US economy.
The current weak economy suggests that goods consumption was probably flat or down, people are just paying more for everything. 15% more! A falling dollar with higher inflation is a world where gold will offer the best protection.
Data Source: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/BOPGSTB
Data Updated: Monthly on one month lag
Last Updated: Feb 07, 2023 for Dec 2022
US Debt interactive charts and graphs can always be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/USDebt/