|

US: Trade poised to boost Q2 GDP - Wells Fargo

A narrowing in the trade deficit in April in back-to-back months means good things for Q2 GDP, but this report is not yet capturing the extent of tariffs on steel and aluminum and survey data about trade is signaling a warning, explained analysts at Wells Fargo.

Key Quotes:

“As the second quarter began, the U.S. trade deficit narrowed as exports increased 0.3 percent while imports declined 0.2 percent in April. After having widened for six consecutive months and now having narrowed in back-to-back months, trade is positioned to be additive to GDP in the second quarter, perhaps substantially so.”

“Given the preoccupation that financial markets have had with tariffs and the potential for a broader trade war, might the flattering trade numbers be a salve for worried markets that there is nothing to fear in protectionist trade policies? Not so fast, keep in mind that this data is only through April and the broader extension of tariffs to our NAFTA trading partners and Europe was not effective until June.”

“It is also useful to remember that international trade figures evolve with long lead times and a glacial pace.”

“It is unclear how long the shadow of tariffs will be cast on trade dynamics in coming years.”

“If there is a storm coming, this might be the calm before it. Imports of iron and steel mill products increased $228 million in April alone and have increased more in the first four months of 2018 than they did in the same period of 2017. Meanwhile imports of bauxite and aluminum increased $44 million in the month.”

“U.S. manufacturers still report expansion in both exports and imports, but not to as broad an extent as they were just a few months ago.”

Author

Matías Salord

Matías started in financial markets in 2008, after graduating in Economics. He was trained in chart analysis and then became an educator. He also studied Journalism. He started writing analyses for specialized websites before joining FXStreet.

More from Matías Salord
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD stabilizes near 1.1800 as markets focus on geopolitics

EUR/USD stays defensive around 1.1800 in the second half of the day on Thursday. The US Dollar stabilizes, following the recent decline led by tariff uncertainty, capping the pair's upside. All eyes now remain on the US-Iran nuclear talks after ECB President Lagarde's testimony failed to impress Euro bulls. 

GBP/USD holds above 1.3500, struggles to gain traction

GBP/USD rebound from session lows but stays below 1.3550 on Thursday. The cautious market stance helps the US Dollar stay resilient against its rivals and makes it difficult for the pair gather recovery momentum. Investors await headlines that will come out of the US-Iran nuclear talks.

Gold clings to small gains near $5,200 ahead of US-Iran talks

Gold trades marginally higher on the day above $5,150 on Thursday as investors refrain from taking large positions. The US and Iran will hold the next round of nuclear talks in Geneva on Thursday, outcome of which could have significant implications for risk perception.

Stellar: Relief bounce fades as bearish undertone persists

Stellar is trading around $0.16 at the time of writing on Thursday after rebounding more than 8% in the previous day. Derivatives data paints a negative picture as XLM’s short bets hit a monthly high while Open Interest continues to decline.

The one thing everyone is on the lookout for is US action of some sort against Iran

The FX market is minestrone soup these days. It is befuddled by conflicting data, rumors and small stories exaggerated out of proportion, and Trump-generated uncertainty. 

Solana strikes key resistance with double-digit gains

Solana trades at $88 at press time on Thursday, after an 11% upswing the previous day within a broader consolidation range of roughly three weeks. Institutional demand for Solana heightens as US spot SOL Exchange Traded Funds record $30 million of inflow on Wednesday.