Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Record gain in imports to West Coast ports as exports lag shows America’s resilience

In Port News 22/04/2015

Ennore port.jpg
For drought-stricken California, March was less about any kind of precipitation from Mother Nature and more about the virtual flood of imported cargo.
Container ships steamed into West Coast ports last month after the end of a labor dispute, a situation that may soon play out in U.S. trade data. And while the resulting surge in imports may be short-lived, it could still depress first-quarter growth — especially when combined with a smaller gain in exports that underscores America’s role as the biggest ship in the waters of the global economy.
The berthing of vessels that had previously been anchored in the Pacific as port operators and the longshore union negotiated a new contract provides anecdotal evidence of a larger U.S. trade bill last month. The California ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach and Oakland, as well as those in Seattle and Tacoma, Washington, saw impressive increases in the number of off-loaded containers.
Imports of fully loaded containers into the Port of Los Angeles jumped a record 69.5 percent last month from February. Long Beach showed a 55.3 percent surge, also the highest since data began in 1995. The combined volume of imported containers into the ports of Seattle and Tacoma were the highest in records to 2008.
By comparison, the volume of exported containers climbed 10.4 percent and 15 percent at Los Angeles and Long Beach, respectively.
“The improvement in containers handled, a proxy for trade activity, was largely the result of more inbound containers,” according to Neil Dutta, head of U.S. economics at Renaissance Macro Research in New York. “Outbound containers bounced, but remain weak, a sign that the strong dollar and weak global economy have taken a toll on U.S. export activity.”
Dutta projects that trade may have reduced first-quarter gross domestic product by about 1 percentage point, “with the risk that the drag is even bigger” after a similar cut in the final three months of 2014.
The last time net exports subtracted at least a percentage point from GDP in consecutive quarters was 1998. Economists see the first quarter growing at a 1.4 percent annualized pace, according to a Bloomberg survey conducted April 3 to April 8.
While some of the drag from trade will be mitigated by a pickup in inventories, “we’re not seeing that yet,” said Dutta.
The trade data, and the fact that consumers did take a breather after a roaring final three months of 2014, likely made for a weak first quarter. That may be about to change. “I think focusing on domestic demand is more useful,” Dutta said. “Trade and inventories are the two most volatile components in the GDP accounts.”
The first-quarter slowdown in household spending notwithstanding, real final sales to domestic purchasers — GDP minus exports and inventories — averaged an annualized 3.6 percent in the previous nine months, the strongest such period since 2005.
If only America’s trading partners were that robust.

Source: Bloomberg