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U.S. Customs Trade Data - August Update

Posted by Carly Volzer on Tuesday, September 07, 2010 No Comments »
On September 7th, we completed the data for August in our U.S. Customs trade data tool, TradeIQ. With a 7.28% increase in total shipments, August brought back the trend of increasing import shipments witnessed in the previous six months, excluding July. The 20.08% increase over the previous year also indicates that trade to the U.S. continues to gain strength.

Below is a table showing port regions of the world where shipments originated:
Port Region Aug 2010
Shipments
Percent Change
over July 2010
Percent Change
over Aug 2009
Asia 667,062 8.93% 22.81%
Europe 129,532 4.64% 11.51%
Central America (includes Mexico) 59,932 2.51% 12.23%
South America 23,589 2.24% 14.48%
North America
10,322 0.42% 20.04%
Unknown 9,530 1.77% 18.81%
Australia 7,086 -8.81% 12.37%
Africa 5,142 0.12% 52.81%
Total 912,195 7.28% 20.08%

To get a clearer picture of the upward trend discussed above, the graph below details total shipments to the U.S. from all port regions over September 2009 - August 2010. Steady growth is seen from March 2010 onward.

 

The collection methods used by U.S. Customs for AMS data can lead to an overstatement of shipments for some ports, as imports and exports from Prince Rupert and Vancouver are often recorded as imports for the U.S. Moreover, the data includes shipments from empty containers, may overstate totals from transshipments, and may contain other data anomalies as well.

Zepol's U.S. Customs trade data is derived from Bills of Lading entered into the Automated Manifest System. This information represents the number of House manifests entered by importers of waterborne containerized goods. This indicator is the earliest data available for the previous month’s trade activity.

Category: News

U.S. Census Trade Data - June Data

Posted by Kevin Palmstein on Thursday, August 12, 2010 No Comments »
The U.S. Census Bureau released its Merchandise Trade data numbers on August 11th for June 2010. The Merchandise Trade balance increased 54.1% over last June and 22.9% from the previous month. Imports grew by 8.4% from May and gained 33.0% over last year, while exports rose 1.4% from the previous month and increased 23.2% over June 2009.

Below is an in-depth breakdown of the U.S. Census Merchandise Trade data released last week. This month we have highlighted 5 interesting items that we found while looking at June's data; here are the highlights:
  1. How shipments arrive indicates new trade trends
  2. Extreme temperatures may lead to gains in U.S. wheat exports
  3. Air exports show the seasonality of trade
  4. Impact of Obama’s signing law to suspend some import duties
  5. Evolving Harmonized System doesn’t react fast enough to new technologies
Click here for Zepol's U.S. Census Merchandise Trade Data Update for June 2010
Category: News

U.S. Customs Trade Data – July Update

Posted by Carly Volzer on Monday, August 09, 2010 1 Comments »
On August 9th, we completed the data for July in our U.S. Customs trade data tool, TradeIQ. With a 0.19% decrease in total shipments during the month, July ends the trend of increasing import shipments witnessed in the previous five months. Though this July's numbers failed to overtake June, we can still see a 15.52% increase over July of the previous year, indicating that 2010 import activity is rebounding from its weak numbers in 2009.

Below is a table showing port regions of the world where shipments originated:
Port Region July 2010
Shipments
Percent Change
over June 2010
Percent Change
over July 2009
Asia 613,575 -0.79% 19.19%
Europe 124,205 0.54% 7.29%
Central America (includes Mexico) 58,700 -1.34% 7.39%
South America 23,145 1.70% 13.76%
North America
10,464 12.25% -15.05%
Unknown 9,393 6.79% 13.83%
Australia 7,785 -3.24% 5.07%
Africa 5,226 40.67% 18.05%
Total 852,493 -0.19% 15.52%

As evidenced in the chart above, shipments from Asia decreased slightly from June, but grew 19.19% over July 2009. A look at July shipments from Asia in previous years shows us that July 2009 shipments marked a significant low time and July 2010 is a return to the strong numbers seen in July 2007 and 2008.

Below is a graph of Asia's historical July shipments, starting with July 2005:

 

The collection methods used by U.S. Customs for AMS data can lead to an overstatement of shipments for some ports, as imports and exports from Prince Rupert and Vancouver are often recorded as imports for the U.S. Moreover, the data includes shipments from empty containers, may overstate totals from transshipments, and may contain other data anomalies as well.

Zepol's U.S. Customs trade data is derived from Bills of Lading entered into the Automated Manifest System. This information represents the number of House manifests entered by importers of waterborne containerized goods. This indicator is the earliest data available for the previous month’s trade activity.

Category: News

U.S. Census Trade Data - May Data

Posted by Kevin Palmstein on Thursday, July 15, 2010 No Comments »
The U.S. Census Bureau released its Merchandise Trade data numbers on July 13th for May 2010. The Merchandise Trade balance increased 52.8% over last May and decreased 0.4% from the previous month. Imports grew by 2.0% from April, and gained 33.5% over last year; while exports rose 3.2% from the previous month and increased 25.9% over May 2009.

Below is an in-depth breakdown of the U.S. Census Merchandise Trade data released last week. This month we have highlighted 5 interesting items that we found while looking at May's data; here are the highlights:
  1. China Rising on the Back of American Consumers
  2. Exports are Up, but to Whom?
  3. Shrimp Imports Show Signs of the Gulf Oil Spill
  4. Canada’s Trade Well Positioned
  5. Where Does All of this Gold Come from?
Click here for Zepol's U.S. Census Merchandise Trade Data Update for May 2010
Category: News