German Trade Surplus Smallest in 4 Months
2026-05-08 06:24
By
Chusnul Chotimah
1 min. read
Germany’s trade surplus narrowed to €14.3 billion in March 2026 from a downwardly revised €19.6 billion in February, falling short of market expectations of €18.4 billion.
It was the smallest trade surplus since last November, as exports rose less than imports.
Exports unexpectedly increased by 0.5% month-on-month to a near 3½-year high of €135.8 billion, slowing sharply from a 3.6% rise in February but easily beating expectations of a 1.7% decline.
Shipments to EU member states grew 3.4%, while those to third countries fell 3.3%.
Meanwhile, imports surged 5.1% month-on-month to €121.5 billion, the highest level since November 2022, accelerating from an upwardly revised 4.9% increase in February and far exceeding expectations of a 0.8% rise.
The increase was driven by purchases from both EU partners (3.0%) and non-EU countries (7.4%).
For the first quarter, the country posted a trade surplus of €54 billion, with exports and imports rising by 1.7% and 1.9%, respectively.