Brunei Trade Surplus Narrows In January

2026-03-30 01:27 By Farida Husna 1 min. read

Brunei’s trade surplus decreased to BND 467.9 million in January 2026 from BND 516.9 million a year earlier, as softer external demand weighed on exports.

Outbound shipments declined 6.8% year-on-year to BND 1.15 billion, mainly due to falls in mineral fuels (-7.8%) and chemicals (-6.3%).

Australia remained the largest export destination (30.2% of total sales), followed by China (22.8%), Japan (12.2%), Singapore (10.5%), and Thailand (9.4%).

Meanwhile, imports dropped 4.8% to BND 678.1 million, largely dragged by lower demand for mineral fuels (-13.3%).

Singapore was the top supplier (33.4%), ahead of the United Arab Emirates (16.3%), Malaysia (13.9%), Australia (9.9%), China (5.4%), and Vietnam (4.4%).

In 2025, the trade surplus eased to BND 5.06 billion from BND 5.28 billion in 2024, as exports contracted by 10.4% while imports declined by 13.8%, indicating broadly weaker trade flows.



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Brunei Trade Surplus Narrows In January
Brunei’s trade surplus decreased to BND 467.9 million in January 2026 from BND 516.9 million a year earlier, as softer external demand weighed on exports. Outbound shipments declined 6.8% year-on-year to BND 1.15 billion, mainly due to falls in mineral fuels (-7.8%) and chemicals (-6.3%). Australia remained the largest export destination (30.2% of total sales), followed by China (22.8%), Japan (12.2%), Singapore (10.5%), and Thailand (9.4%). Meanwhile, imports dropped 4.8% to BND 678.1 million, largely dragged by lower demand for mineral fuels (-13.3%). Singapore was the top supplier (33.4%), ahead of the United Arab Emirates (16.3%), Malaysia (13.9%), Australia (9.9%), China (5.4%), and Vietnam (4.4%). In 2025, the trade surplus eased to BND 5.06 billion from BND 5.28 billion in 2024, as exports contracted by 10.4% while imports declined by 13.8%, indicating broadly weaker trade flows.
2026-03-30
Brunei Trade Surplus Hits 2-1/2-Year Low
Brunei’s trade surplus fell sharply to BND 136.9 million in December 2025 from BND 368.8 million in the same month a year earlier. It marked the lowest trade gain since June 2023, mainly due to a jump in imports. Purchases surged 27.7% yoy to a 19-month high of BND 1,005.1 million, boosted by stronger demand for mineral fuels (40.2%) and miscellaneous manufactured articles (117.1%). Malaysia was the top import source (55.1% of total purchases), followed by the United Arab Emirates (9.5%), Kazakhstan (9.1%), China (5.7%), and Indonesia (4.4%). Meanwhile, sales dropped 1.2% to BND 1.14 billion, primarily due to lower shipments of mineral fuels (-1.1%) and chemicals (-13.0%). Key export destinations included Australia, with 26.1% share, China (13.7%), Singapore (13.4%), Japan (12.4%), and Malaysia (6.8%). For the full year, the trade surplus was at BND 5.06 billion, down from BND 5.28 billion in 2024, as exports shrank 10.4% while imports dipped 13.8%.
2026-02-25
Brunei Trade Surplus Narrows in November
Brunei’s trade surplus fell to BND 390.0 million in November 2025 from BND 429.3 million in the same month a year earlier. It was the lowest trade surplus since May, as imports dropped faster than exports. Year-on-year, purchases plunged 10.4% to BND 648.7 million, reflecting weaker demand for mineral fuels (-6.3%) and machinery and transport equipment (-14.7%). Malaysia remained the top import source (50.4% of total purchases), followed by South Africa (13.1%), China (7.4%), Australia (5.1%), Singapore (4.0%), and the U.S. (3.0%). Meanwhile, exports shrank 9.5% to BND 1.04 billion, primarily due to lower shipments of mineral fuels (-16.4%). Key export destinations included Australia (23.1%), China (15.7%), Japan (12.3%), Singapore (11.3%), and Vietnam (8.5%). For the first eleven months of the year, the trade surplus was at BND 4.92 billion, little changed from a gain of BND 4.91 billion a year earlier, as exports contracted 11.2% while imports slumped 17.4%.
2026-01-27