CN Rail Strike Takes a Toll on Canada’s Trade Balance

Bloomberg

Published Jan 07, 2020 08:30

Updated Jan 07, 2020 09:01

CN Rail Strike Takes a Toll on Canada’s Trade Balance

(Bloomberg) -- Canada’s trade gap reached C$1.1 billion ($847 million) in November after a multi-day rail strike disrupted transportation of key goods, raising concerns about the strength of the domestic economy.

The headline figure slightly beat economist expectations for a C$1.2 billion trade deficit, but the gap only narrowed because October’s numbers were revised to a C$1.6 billion deficit from an originally reported C$1.1 billion deficit.

The soft trade report follows a series of weak economic data releases over the past couple weeks, potentially putting pressure on the Bank to Canada to consider an interest rate cut in the first half of 2020.

Key Insights

  • The report paints a picture of a fragile trade backdrop in Canada and while part of the weakness is attributable to the rail strike, it will be hard for policy makers to shrug this off given the recent disappointing numbers across jobs, manufacturing and retail sales reports
  • One of the few bright spots in the report was record shipments to the U.K., mostly gold and crude. Excluding precious metals, Canada’s export volumes fell 4.3% in November, the largest monthly drop since 2009
  • October’s trade deficit was revised to C$1.6 billion after Statistics Canada made some revisions to the way it measures shipments of high-value transactions such as art
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