Business

Australia celebrates record trade surplus as exports boom

  • 102 reading now

Australia boasted its biggest trade surplus on record in December as surging commodity prices showered the resource-rich nation in cash, a windfall that could lessen the risk of a downgrade to its triple A credit rating.

Thursday's data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed a trade surplus of $3.51 billion in December, handily outpacing forecasts of $2.2 billion.

Up Next

Marcs, David Lawrence in voluntary administration

null
Video duration
00:22

More BusinessDay Videos

Is a AAA credit rating that important?

Australia's politicians love to bang on about the country's credit rating, but what is it, and what will happen if we lost our triple-A status?

The previous month was also revised up sharply to $2 billion, a double win that lifted the Australian dollar to over 76 US cents.

Exports jumped by 5.3 per cent to a record $32.6 billion, led by double-digit gains in coal and iron ore, while imports edged up only 0.7 per cent .

For the December quarter as a whole, the country notched up a surplus of $4.8 billion in a startling turnaround from the previous quarter's $3.8 billion shortfall.

That will also sharply shrink the fourth-quarter current account deficit, a timely improvement given S&P; Global Ratings has cited a reliance on foreign funding as one reason it might cut Australia's top credit rating.

Advertisement

"The current account deficit is the mirror image of our borrowing from the rest of the world," said CBA chief economist Michael Blythe. "The implication is that our reliance on the savings of the rest of the world should decline."

"These developments should feed into the debate about the sustainability of Australia's AAA rating in a positive way."

The rush of export earnings will also ripple through the economy via higher profits, incomes and tax receipts. That will again be a timely source of support given another engine of growth - residential construction - looks to be near its peak.

A separate report out on Thursday showed approvals to build new homes dipped 1.2 per cent in December, the fourth fall in five months.

The pipeline of work yet to be done is still at record highs and should last longer in this cycle as much more of the construction comprises high-rise apartment towers.

Yet the market is set to cool as the year progresses.

"After housing activity rose consecutively for four years, its longest ever boom, we now think that it has probably already peaked at over 6 per cent of nominal GDP," said George Tharenou, an economist ay UBS.

If right, home building could make little net contribution to economic growth over all of 2017, having added half a per cent age point last year. 

Reuters