Russia Posts Smallest Trade Surplus in Over 2 Years

2026-01-23 13:47 By Andre Joaquim 1 min. read

Russia recorded a trade surplus of $8.6 billion in November of 2025, narrowing from the $12.3 billion in the corresponding period of the previous year to mark the lowest trade surplus since July of 2023.

It was the second-lowest surplus since February of 2022, when the Russian invasion of Ukraine resulted in shocks in global commodity markets and sweeping sanctions against the Russian economy.

Exports contracted by 16.2% from the previous year to $32.9 billion, the sharpest decline in nearly two years, due to lower crude oil prices and the gradual shun of cargoes by Indian refiners following the US sanctions on Lukoil and Rosneft.

In turn, imports fell by 3.1% to $26.1 billion, a fourth straight decline despite the strength in the ruble, as a weakening domestic economy limited demand for goods.



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Russia Posts Smallest Trade Surplus in Over 2 Years
Russia recorded a trade surplus of $8.6 billion in November of 2025, narrowing from the $12.3 billion in the corresponding period of the previous year to mark the lowest trade surplus since July of 2023. It was the second-lowest surplus since February of 2022, when the Russian invasion of Ukraine resulted in shocks in global commodity markets and sweeping sanctions against the Russian economy. Exports contracted by 16.2% from the previous year to $32.9 billion, the sharpest decline in nearly two years, due to lower crude oil prices and the gradual shun of cargoes by Indian refiners following the US sanctions on Lukoil and Rosneft. In turn, imports fell by 3.1% to $26.1 billion, a fourth straight decline despite the strength in the ruble, as a weakening domestic economy limited demand for goods.
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Russia recorded a trade surplus of $13.6 billion in September of 2025, widening from the $11.9 billion surplus in the corresponding period of the previous year, and the widest in over one year as Russia's weakening economy drove imports to contract more than exports. Imports sank by 7.2% annually to $25 billion, as weaker Russian consumers and business pared their demand for foreign goods, despite the stronger ruble. In the meantime, exports contracted by 4.1% to $38.1 billion. Lower oil prices and softer commodity demand from Russia's key trading partner, China, pared buying from Russia's key industries that are shunned from commerce with the West.
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