US trade deficit widens to record $73.3bn in August

Bloomberg

The US trade deficit widened to a record in August, reflecting a pickup in the value of imports of consumer goods and industrial supplies.
The gap in trade of goods and services increased 4.2% to $73.3 billion, from a revised $70.3 billion in July, according to Commerce Department data. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists was for a shortfall of $70.8 billion.
The value of goods and services imports rise 1.4% to a record $287 billion in August. The US imported $3 billion more consumer goods during the month, mostly due to pharmaceuticals and toys, games and sporting goods. Exports climbed 0.5% to $213.7 billion.
While a surge in household demand for merchandise earlier this year and steady business demand for equipment have left inventories extremely lean, the reopening of the economy is gradually boosting
demand for services.
At the same time, domestic producers have struggled to ramp up output because logistics bottlenecks have knocked global supply chains out of sync, resulting in backups at ports, a wide range of materials shortages, and soaring shipping rates.

US consumer sentiment rises slightly
US consumer sentiment edged higher in late September, though remained near a pandemic low, as Americans grew slightly more optimistic about current economic conditions.
The University of Michigan’s final sentiment index rose to 72.8 from the preliminary reading of 71, data showed. The figure exceeded the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists and compared with an August print of 70.3.
“Consumer sentiment edged upward in late September,” Richard Curtin, director of the survey, said in a statement. “Although the overall gain still meant the continuation of depressed optimism, initially sparked by the delta variant and supported by a surge in inflation and unfavourable long-term prospects for the national economy.”
The slight improvement in sentiment suggests that concerns about the delta variant are beginning to ebb as new Covid-19 cases fall in most states. While high prices and ongoing health concerns persist as headwinds for sentiment, overall consumer spending remains elevated.
A separate report showed personal spending growth accelerated more than forecast in August, increasing 0.8% in the month after declining 0.1% in July. Adjusted for inflation, that figure rose 0.4% after a 0.5% decline in the prior month.
Buying conditions for homes, vehicles and durable goods deteriorated from August due to high prices, according to the University of Michigan report. That said, the buying climate for durables improved from earlier last month.
Consumers expect inflation to rise 4.6% over the next year, and 3% over the next five years, up from 2.9% in August.
The gauge of current conditions rose to 80.1 from 77.1 in the initial print, while a measure of future expectations improved to 68.1, according to the survey conducted August 25 to September 27.
Respondents viewed their current financial situations more favourably than in August. Over the next five years, however, only 44% of respondents expect their financial situations to improve, the lowest level
in seven years, according to the report.

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