United States: Trade in Goods and Services - Trade Balance (SA)

Macro

2026-01-29

Description

The U.S. Trade Balance of Goods and Services is jointly released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and the U.S. Census Bureau. It measures the difference between the value of goods and services exported from and imported into the United States over a specific period. A positive balance indicates a trade surplus, while a negative balance indicates a trade deficit. This is a crucial indicator for assessing the U.S. trade situation and the degree of external economic balance.

Both trade surpluses and deficits have their advantages and disadvantages, with no absolute good or bad. A trade surplus can increase foreign exchange reserves, strengthen currency stability, and promote economic growth, but an excessive surplus may lead to trade friction and expose the risk of insufficient domestic demand. On the other hand, a trade deficit reflects strong domestic consumption capacity, which can enhance quality of life and drive technological progress. However, if persistent, it may weaken the currency, increase debt burdens, and bring inflationary pressure.

This data is released monthly, reflecting the trade situation of the United States for the previous month.

Published by
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (Choice)
Frequency
Monthly
Next Update

AI Data Insight

The U.S. trade deficit widened significantly in October to $56.83 billion, nearly doubling from the abnormally low $29.35 billion in the previous month and returning to the average range for the second half of this year. With the approach of the holiday consumption season and warming import demand, coupled with a softer dollar pushing up import costs, trade imbalances have re-emerged. The market is closely watching the long-term impact of 2026 tariff policies on the supply chain.

AI Data Insight

The U.S. trade deficit widened significantly in October to $56.83 billion, nearly doubling from the abnormally low $29.35 billion in the previous month and returning to the average range for the second half of this year. With the approach of the holiday consumption season and warming import demand, coupled with a softer dollar pushing up import costs, trade imbalances have re-emerged. The market is closely watching the long-term impact of 2026 tariff policies on the supply chain.

Description

The U.S. Trade Balance of Goods and Services is jointly released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and the U.S. Census Bureau. It measures the difference between the value of goods and services exported from and imported into the United States over a specific period. A positive balance indicates a trade surplus, while a negative balance indicates a trade deficit. This is a crucial indicator for assessing the U.S. trade situation and the degree of external economic balance.

Both trade surpluses and deficits have their advantages and disadvantages, with no absolute good or bad. A trade surplus can increase foreign exchange reserves, strengthen currency stability, and promote economic growth, but an excessive surplus may lead to trade friction and expose the risk of insufficient domestic demand. On the other hand, a trade deficit reflects strong domestic consumption capacity, which can enhance quality of life and drive technological progress. However, if persistent, it may weaken the currency, increase debt burdens, and bring inflationary pressure.

This data is released monthly, reflecting the trade situation of the United States for the previous month.

Published by
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (Choice)
Frequency
Monthly
Next Update