| Actual | Previous | Revised | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Oil Exports - Y/Y | 22.2% | 6.9% | 7.0% |
| Total Imports - Y/Y | 14.8% |
Highlights
The strengthening in headline growth in exports was driven by a strong rebound in exports to the European Union, up 7.3 percent on the year after falling 20.5 percent previously, and stronger growth to Taiwan, Hong Kong and South Korea. Exports to the United States, however, fell 12.5 percent on the year after a previous decline of 9.8 percent, while exports to the China Japan and China also weakened.
Stronger growth in headline exports was broad-based across categories. Electronic exports rose 33.2 percent on the year in October, up from growth of 26.8 percent in September, while exports of non-electronic products advanced 18.8 percent after increasing 0.5 percent previously.
Definition
Description
Imports indicate demand for foreign goods and services in the local economy. Exports show the demand for local goods in countries overseas. Movements in the trade balance directly affect GDP growth because of the Singapore’s dependence on trade. Stronger exports are bullish for corporate earnings and the stock market. The bond market is also sensitive to the risk of importing inflation.
This report also gives a breakdown of trade with major countries as well, so it can be instructive for investors who are interested in diversifying globally. For example, a trend of accelerating exports to a particular country might signal economic strength and investment opportunities in that country.