US Goods Trade Deficit Larger Than Expected

2025-08-29 12:43 By Kyrie Dichosa 1 min. read

The US trade deficit in goods widened by $18.7 billion from the previous month to $103.6 billion in July 2025, far above expectations of $89.5 billion, according to an advance estimate.

This marked the largest gap in four months, nearing the record-high deficit of $162 billion in March, driven by inventory front-loading ahead of new US tariffs.

Imports jumped 7.1% from a month earlier to $281.5 billion, led by industrial supplies (25.4% to $60.7 billion), capital goods (4.8% to $95.9 billion), foods and beverages (2.4% to $18.5 billion), consumer goods (2.1% to $95.9 billion), and other goods (11.5% to $13.5 billion).

Meanwhile, exports slipped 0.1% to $178 billion, reflecting lower sales of industrial supplies (-0.8% to $59.9 billion), consumer goods (-0.9% to $22.8 billion), and other goods (-2.4% to $8.7 billion), partly offset by gains in automotive vehicles (2.2% to $13 billion), capital goods (0.7% to $59.8 billion), and foods and beverages (0.5% to $13.8 billion).



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The US trade deficit in goods widened by $18.7 billion from the previous month to $103.6 billion in July 2025, far above expectations of $89.5 billion, according to an advance estimate. This marked the largest gap in four months, nearing the record-high deficit of $162 billion in March, driven by inventory front-loading ahead of new US tariffs. Imports jumped 7.1% from a month earlier to $281.5 billion, led by industrial supplies (25.4% to $60.7 billion), capital goods (4.8% to $95.9 billion), foods and beverages (2.4% to $18.5 billion), consumer goods (2.1% to $95.9 billion), and other goods (11.5% to $13.5 billion). Meanwhile, exports slipped 0.1% to $178 billion, reflecting lower sales of industrial supplies (-0.8% to $59.9 billion), consumer goods (-0.9% to $22.8 billion), and other goods (-2.4% to $8.7 billion), partly offset by gains in automotive vehicles (2.2% to $13 billion), capital goods (0.7% to $59.8 billion), and foods and beverages (0.5% to $13.8 billion).
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