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Canada posted a small monthly international trade surplus in September, reversing a trend of seven consecutive months of deficits, data showed on Thursday.
It registered a marginal trade surplus of $153 million in September, following a $6.43 billion deficit in the prior month, Statistics Canada said.
This was the first ever surplus that Canada has posted since U.S. President Donald Trump threatened and later imposed tariffs on critical sectors, which choked significant exports to the U.S., Canada’s biggest trading partner.
The bulk of the surplus was driven by a 44 per cent jump in Canada’s trade surplus with the U.S., Statistics Canada data showed.
The September trade data, which was due in November, was delayed as information for Canadian exports to the U.S. was unavailable due to a 43-day government shutdown in the U.S.
Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast the trade deficit at $4.5 billion for September. Economists said the trade numbers show that Canada’s international merchandise trade was finally starting to normalize.
“Overall story is really positive,” said Prince Owusu, a senior economist with Export Development Canada.
“It seems to suggest that the trade flow with the United States is beginning to stabilize,” he said, adding that the trend of diversification from the U.S. that started is also continuing.
Canada’s total exports in September grew by 6.3 per cent, to $64.23 billion, rebounding from a drop of 3.2 per cent in August, and were driven by higher exports in nine out of 11 product sections.
This was the largest percentage increase since February 2024. It was led by U.S. exports that grew by 4.6 per cent and exports to countries other than the U.S. growing by 11 per cent, Statistics Canada said.
Exports of metal and non-metallic mineral products and aircraft and transportation equipment and parts led the gains with a more than 20 per cent rise in exports. In volume terms, total exports rose 4.1 per cent, the agency said.
Total merchandise imports dropped by 4.1 per cent in September to $64.08 billion.
Exports to U.S. grew in August
Exports to the U.S. grew to $45.84 billion from $43.83 billion in August, helped by outbound shipments of aircraft, light trucks and unwrought gold, Statistics Canada said.
The U.S. accounted for more than 71 per cent of Canada’s exports in September. Imports from the U.S. declined 1.7 per cent in September, a third consecutive monthly decrease, taking Canada’s trade surplus with the U.S. to its highest level since February.
Higher shipments of unwrought gold, crude oil and aircraft led the jump in exports to countries other than the U.S. Imports from countries other than the U.S. dropped 7.3 per cent.
Canada’s trade deficit with countries other than the United States has narrowed sharply, posting the lowest deficit since October 2024, Statistics Canada said.
The Canadian dollar firmed in early trade and was trading up 0.2 per cent to 1.3767 to the U.S. dollar, or 72.64 U.S. cents. Yields on the two-year government bonds were down 0.2 basis points to 2.524 per cent.