US trade deficit widens sharply in December; goods trade gap highest on record in 2025
Source: Reuters
Reuters
US trade deficit widens sharply in December; goods trade gap highest on record in 2025
By Reuters
February 19, 2026 9:34 AM EST * Updated 31 mins ago
WASHINGTON, Feb 19 (Reuters) - The U.S. trade deficit widened sharply in December amid a surge in imports, and the goods shortfall in 2025 was the highest on record despite President Donald Trump's tariffs on foreign manufactured merchandise.
The trade gap ballooned 32.6% to $70.3 billion, the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis and Census Bureau said on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters forecast the trade deficit would contract to $55.5 billion. The trade deficit narrowed 0.2% to $901.5 billion in 2025. The goods trade gap widened 2.1% to an all-time high of $1.24 trillion.
Trump last year unleashed a barrage of tariffs against trading partners with the aim, among other things, to address trade imbalances and protect U.S. industries. But the punitive duties have not yielded a manufacturing renaissance, with factory employment declining by 83,000 jobs from January 2025 through January 2026.
The report was delayed because of last year's government shutdown. Imports increased 3.6% to $357.6 billion in December. Goods imports surged 3.8% to $280.2 billion, boosted by a $7.0 billion increase in industrial supplies and materials, mostly non-monetary gold, copper and crude oil.
{snip}
Read more: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-trade-deficit-widens-sharply-december-goods-trade-gap-highest-record-2025-2026-02-19/
Hat tip, Joe.My.God.
https://www.joemygod.com/2026/02/commerce-dept-2025-trade-deficit-was-record-1-2t/
sinkingfeeling
(57,574 posts)William Seger
(12,324 posts)"Dumbest trade war in history" according to the Wall Street Journal, but they're not smart like #rump.
wolfie001
(7,448 posts)Fucking monsters.
Ol Janx Spirit
(874 posts)...to this tariff regime.
But capital goods exports increased, boosted by semiconductors. There were increases in exports of consumer goods, including pharmaceutical preparations. Exports of goods increased 5.7% to an all-time high of $2.20 trillion in 2025, boosted by capital goods, industrial supplies and materials, other goods as well as consumer goods.
...
The economy likely grew at a 3.0% annualized rate last quarter after expanding at a 4.4% pace in the July-September quarter, a Reuters survey of economists showed.
https://www.reuters.com/business/us-trade-deficit-widens-sharply-december-goods-trade-gap-highest-record-2025-2026-02-19/
This is part of the reason that Blondie Bondi can shrilly scream about the DOW being high, and a reason that the Administration uses as an indication that the economy is actually doing well.
Trade deficits act as a direct subtraction in the GDP formula, so the fact that the GDP number is still pretty robust even with these trade deficits indicates that the economy is still doing pretty well--which is surprising given the massive tax increase in the form of tariffs and the extreme reduction of the labor force through both immigration policy and the slashing of government jobs (assuming we can believe the numbers we are getting.) Of course, well for whom is part of the rub...but still....
Thus far, the single horsehair holding the Sword of Damocles over our economy has managed to not break.
How long will or can that continue?
BaronChocula
(4,288 posts)With exports rising and imports falling, the trade shortfall was just $29.4 billion for October, down 39% from the prior month. Exports increased 2.6% while imports slipped 3.2%.
The total was the lowest since the second quarter of 2009 as the U.S. was just coming out of the financial crisis and the Great Recession.
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/08/trade-deficit-in-october-hits-smallest-since-2009-after-trumps-tariff-moves.html
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(134,258 posts)Everything Trump touches dies.
Prairie Gates
(7,632 posts)What this data tells us is that everybody is playing a wait-and-see game with SCOTUS, either anticipating that tariffs will have to be refunded, or eating the cost until SCOTUS blesses them. No sense looking for new sources until there's clarity from the courts. If the same "resilience" and import surges are happening post-SCOTUS, then it'll be something to write home about. Until then, it at best tells us that markets are in a holding pattern.