Canadian Wholesale Sales Hit Record In May

 | Jul 23, 2018 08:50

Wholesale sales rose 1.2% to a record $63.7 billion in May. Sales were up in four of seven sub-sectors, representing approximately 50% of total wholesale sales.

The miscellaneous, building material and supplies, and farm product sub-sectors contributed the most to the gains in May, while the motor vehicle and parts sub-sector posted the largest decline.

In volume terms, wholesale sales increased 1.3%.

Sales increase in four of seven sub-sectors, led by the miscellaneous and the building material and supplies sub-sectors

In dollar terms, the miscellaneous sub-sector reported the largest increase in May, as sales rose 7.8% to $8.3 billion. Sales were up in four of five industries, led by the agricultural supplies industry (+25.6%) following a 5.4% decline in April. In volume terms, the agricultural supplies industry increased 27.4%.

Sales in the building material and supplies sub-sector rose 5.0% to $9.7 billion as all industries posted gains in May. Much of May’s increase was attributable to higher sales in the lumber, millwork, hardware and other building supplies industry, up 7.3% to $4.9 billion. This was the third consecutive increase for the industry and the highest sales level since July 2017. In volume terms, the industry increased 6.8%, indicating that the gain in the current dollar series was partly price driven. In May, international merchandise trade reported gains in both imports and exports of building and packaging materials.

Following a 17.5% decline in April, the farm product sub-sector rebounded in May, up 25.5% to $859 million. This was the third increase in four months and the highest level since November 2017. A 28.5% increase in volume terms signifies that price changes had no impact on the growth seen in the current dollar series. Exports of farm and fishing products increased in May.

The motor vehicle and supplies sub-sector recorded the largest decline in dollar terms in May, down 2.5% to $11.1 billion. This was the second consecutive monthly decline and the fifth drop in six months, bringing the sub-sector to its lowest level since December 2016. The sole contributor to the decrease was the motor vehicle industry, down 3.7% to $8.9 billion. Imports and exports of passenger cars and light trucks as well as manufacturing sales of motor vehicles declined in May.