U.S. international transactions, third quarter 1985.
Dilullo, Anthony J.
U.S. International Transactions, Third Quarter 1985
THE U.S. current-account deficit increased to $30.5 billion in the
third quarter from $27.7 billion (revised) in the second. The
merchandise trade deficit increased $4.6 billion, to a record $33.1
billion. Exports decreased $1.3 billion to $52.3 billion, and imports
increased $3.2 billion to $85.5 billion. The increase in the
merchandise trade deficit was partly offset by a $2.3 billion increase
in net service receipts to $6.7 billion, primarily reflecting an
increase in receipts of income on U.S. direct investment abroad due to
capital gains from dollar depreciation. Unilateral transfers increased
$0.5 billion to $4.0 billion, as disbursements to several Middle East
countries rose sharply.
In the capital accounts, the increase in claims reported by U.S.
banks was small, as demand for U.S. bank credit in industrial countries
remained limited and substitute bond market borrowings were strong.
Substantial net U.S. purchases of foreign securities continued to
reflect favorable bond yields, advancing stock prices, and anticipation
of gains from further dollar depreciation. Outflows for U.S. direct
investment abroad increased; the increase was more than accounted for by
a shift to net intercompany debt outflows.
Liabilities to private foreigners and international financial
institutions reported by U.S. banks, excluding U.S. Treasury
securities, increased moderately as U.S. banks' requirements for
short-term funding from abroad remained limited. Increased purchases of
U.S. Treasury securities by private foreigners reflected continued
large purchases by Japanese investors. Purchases of U.S. securities
other than U.S. Treasury issues reached record levels, as new foreign
bond issues of U.S. corporations surged. Inflows for foreign direct
investment in the United States slowed, reflecting a decrease in
intercompany debt inflows from Western Europe.
The statistical discrepancy (errors and omissions in reported
transactions) was an inflow of $6.5 billion.
U.S. dollar in exchange markets
The dollar depreciated 7 percent and 5 percent on a trade-weighted
average basis against the currencies of 10 industrial and 22 OECD countries, respectively, in the third quarter (chart 9 table C). Reports
of continued slow U.S. economic growth early in the quarter and the
likelihood that Federal Reserve policies would not lead to an increase
in U.S. interest rates contributed to the depreciation. Depreciation
slowed somewhat in August and into September as U.S. short-term interest
rates increased slightly (chart 10). However, because U.S. rates
remained below or only marginally higher than rates in several
countries, investments in assets denominated in other currencies,
especially the British pound, became increasingly attractive. In late
September, the Group of Five (France, Germany, Japan, United Kingdom,
and United States) announced that further orderly appreciation of major
currencies against the dollar was desirable in view of recent shifts in
fundamental economic conditions. The announcement, together with
subsequent intervention in exchange markets by several members of the
Group of Five, led to an acceleration in the dollar's depreciation
at the end of the quarter.
Among the key currencies, the dollar depreciated 9 percent against
the British pound and the Swiss franc, 8 percent against the German
mark, and 5 percent against the Japanese yen. Large capital outflows
from Japan limited appreciation of the yen against the dollar. The
realignment of currencies within the European Monetary System in
July--involving an 8-percent depreciation of the Italian lira--had
little impact on the dollar exchange rate.
The dollar appreciated sharply against the Mexican peso as measured
by the "controlled" rate and the "superfree" market
rate. The Mexican Government devalued the "controlled"
exchange rate by 17 percent in late July after a large drop in the
"superfree" market rate and introduced a "regulated
float" to replace the earlier system for gradually depreciating the
"controlled" rate.
Merchandise trade
The merchandise trade deficit increased $4.6 billion to a record
$33.1 billion in the third quarter. Exports decreased $1.3 billion to
$52.3 billion, the lowest level in 2 years. Both agricultural and
nonagricultural exports decreased. Moderate economic expansion abroad,
the still high value of the dollar, and import restrictions in some
developing countries continued to depress U.S. exports. In addition,
weakening commodity prices and ample agricultural supplies in other
exporting countries contributed to the drop in agricultural exports to
the lowest level since the first quarter of 1979. Imports increased $3.2
billion to $85.5 billion. A large increase in non-petroleum imports was
partly offset by a decrease in petroleum imports.
Nonagricultural exports decreased $0.7 billion to $45.8 billion. A
decrease of $0.6 billion in machinery exports was evenly distributed
among computers and electrical, construction, and industrial machinery.
Consumer goods, low-value shipments, and other miscellaneous exports
together decreased $0.8 billion. The decreases were largely offset by a
$0.5 billion increase in aircraft exports, mainly to Saudi Arabia, and a
$0.2 billion increase in exports of automotive products to Canada.
Agricultural exports decreased $0.6 billion to $6.5 billion.
Decreases in grain and soybean exports, which more than accounted for
the total decrease, reflected substantial drops in commodity prices.
The average price of wheat exports decreased 9 percent, and average corn
and soybean prices decreased 8 percent each. Although most of the
third-quarter decrease was in exports to Eastern Europe, the depressed
level of U.S. agricultural exports for the past eight quarters largely
reflected a decrease of nearly 50 percent in exports to Western Europe,
as abundant worldwide supplies and increased agricultural production in
the Economic Communities displaced U.S. exports. Agricultural exports
to other major U.S. markets--Japan, Latin America, Asia, and
Africa--decreased by smaller amounts.
Imports increased $3.2 billion to $85.5 billion. Nonpetroleum
imports increased $3.8 billion to $72.9 billion; most of the increase
was in volume. The depreciation of the dollar since late February
apparently has had little impact on imports so far. Among the major
end-use categories, the combined increase of $3.5 billion in automotive
products, capital goods, and consumer goods, mostly from Japan and the
newly industrialized countries in Asia, accounted for most of the
increase in nonpetroleum imports. Nonpetroleum industrial supplies
increased $0.3 billion, and food products increased $0.1 billion. The
pattern of increases in the third quarter was consistent with the
pattern that has prevailed in the current U.S. upswing. Since the first
quarter of 1983, the average quarterly increase in capital goods and
automotive products was 7.0 percent each; in consumer goods, 5.0
percent; and in industrial supplies and materials, excluding petroleum,
3.0 percent.
In the third quarter, imports of automotive products from Canada
and Japan were boosted $1.0 billion by record U.S. sales of new cars and
trucks in late August and September in response to attractive financing
packages and rebates offered by U.S. and some foreign manufacturers. Of
the $1.2 billion increase in capital goods imports, the largest
increases were in computers and in scientific, professional, and service
industry equipment. Textile products, boosted by a large increase from
mainland China, and electric appliances accounted for one-half of the
$1.3 billion increase in consumer goods. Much of the increase in
computers and electrical appliances was from Japan and the newly
industrialized countries in Asia (Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, and
Taiwan).
Petroleum imports decreased $0.5 billion to $12.6 billion. The
decrease reflected a drop in the average price per barrel to $25.78 from
$27.01. The average number of barrels imported daily increased to 5.34
million from 5.30 million, resulting in a moderate increase in domestic
petroleum stocks. Anticipation of further price decreases probably led
some importers to delay purchases.
The increase in the merchandise trade deficit was largely
attributable to increases in the deficits with Japan and the newly
industrialized countries in Asia. The deficit with Japan increased $1.4
billion to $11.4 billion, and the deficit with the newly industrialized
countries increased $2.2 billion to $6.6 billion. Imports from each of
those countries increased substantially. Exports to Japan increased far
less than imports; and exports to the newly industrialized countries
decreased. The deficit with Western Europe increased $0.8 billion to
$6.1 billion; exports decreased $0.4 billion and imports increased $0.4
billion. The deficit with Eastern Europe increased $0.4 billion due to
decreased exports of agricultural products. A larger decrease in
imports than in exports reduced the deficit with Canada $0.2 billion to
$3.6 billion. The deficit with Latin America was virtually unchanged at
$3.7 billion. Increases in the deficits with Brazil and Venezuela were
offset by decreases with other countries, mainly Mexico.
Service transactions
Net service receipts increased $2.3 billion to $6.7 billion in the
third quarter. Higher net investment income receipts accounted for most
of the increase.
Receipts of income on U.S. direct investment abroad increased $1.6
billion to $10.2 billion; the increase was more than accounted for by
the effect of dollar depreciation on capital gains, which increased $2.1
billion to $3.1 billion. Earnings before capital gains and losses
decreased $0.5 billion to $8.2 billion. The decrease was concentrated
among petroleum affiliates in the United Kingdom. Net interest
payments, largely to Netherlands Antilles finance affiliates, were
unchanged at $1.1 billion (table D). Payments of income on foreign
direct investment in the United States decreased $0.4 billion to $2.4
billion. Capital gains were $0.1 billion compared with $0.4 billion.
The previous quarter included large capital gains of insurance
affiliates. Earnings before capital gains and losses decreased $0.2
billion to $1.4 billion.
Receipts of income on other private assets decreased $0.4 billion
to $12.2 billion, due to the lagged impact of declining interest rates
and the drop in bank-reported claims on foreigners that occurred earlier
this year. The decrease was partly offset by a payment of interest
arrears by Argentina. No new major interest arrears occurred in the
third quarter. Payments decreased $0.1 billion to $8.7 billion. An
increase in interest payments on U.S. corporate bonds due to large-scale
borrowing this year was more than offset by a decrease in interest
payments by banks. Receipts of income on U.S. Government assets
increased $0.4 billion to $1.7 billion. Some interest receipts
scheduled for collection earlier in the year were received in the third
quarter. Payments increased $0.1 billion to $5.4 billion. Large
purchases of U.S. Treasury securities contributed to the increase,
partly offset by a decline in interest rates.
Travel receipts and payments were unchanged at $2.9 billion and
$4.2 billion, respectively. Receipts from Canadian visitors increased
slightly, and receipts from overseas visitors were unchanged. A drop in
receipts from Mexico in the border area was offset by a large increase
in receipts from Mexican visitors to the U.S. interior. A small
increase in payments for travel overseas and to Canada was offset by a
decrease in payments to Mexico. Passenger fare receipts decreased $0.1
billion to $0.7 billion, as fewer overseas visitors traveled to the
United States. Payments were unchanged. Other transportation receipts
were up $0.1 billion to $3.6 billion, and payments were unchanged at
$4.1 billion.
Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts were $2.4
billion, an increase of $0.2 billion. The increase was mainly in
deliveries of aircraft. Direct defense expenditures were unchanged at
$2.8 billion.
Net unilateral transfers were $4.0 billion, up $0.5 billion due to
an increase in disbursements to several countries in the Middle East
following an additional appropriation of funds by Congress.
U.S. assets abroad
U.S. official reserve assets increased $0.1 billion compared with
an increase of $0.4 billion in the second quarter. A $0.3 billion
increase in holdings of special drawing rights (SDR's) was more
than offest by a $0.4 billion decline in the U.S. reserve position at
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as the IMF sold SDR's for
dollars. U.S. holdings of foreign currencies increased $0.2 billion.
Holdings of Japanese yen and German marks increased $0.4 billion partly
as a result of exchange market intervention by U.S. monetary authorities
following the meeting of the Group of Five in late September. The
increase also included income earned on foreign currency assets.
Holdings of Argentine currency decreased as Argentina repaid a bridge
loan following disbursement of proceeds of an IMF loan.
U.S. claims on foreigners reported by U.S. banks increased $1.4
billion, compared with a decreased of $4.1 billion. A $5.0 billion
increase in claims of banks' domestic customers and claims
denominated in foreign currencies more than offset a $3.5 billion
decrease in banks' claims on their own foreign offices. Claims
denominated in foreign currencies increased strongly for the fourth
consecutive quarter, partly coinciding with the dollar's
depreciation. Domestic customers' claims increased $4.1 billion.
In other categories, bank claims remained weak or decreased due to
the same factors that have been operative for some time: moderate
economic expansion in industrial countries; concentration of growth in
credit demands in the Euronote and bond markets; and little or no new
net lending to public borrowers in some developing countries,
particularly those in Latin America. Interbank claims on financial
centers in the Caribbean dropped sharply; claims on offices in the
United Kingdom increased, apparently to meet those offices' funding
needs.
Net U.S. purchases of foreign securities were $1.8 billion compared
with $2.2 billion. Net purchases of foreign stocks were $1.0 billion
compared with $0.2 billion, reflecting a shift from net sales of $0.4
billion to net purchases of $0.1 billion of Japanese stocks and an
increase of $0.3 billion in net purchases of Canadian and Hong Kong
stocks combined. Advances in foreign stock prices and anticipation of
gains from further dollar depreciation encouraged U.S. investors, mainly
institutions, to increase their purchases of foreign stocks.
New foreign bond issues were $1.2 billion compared with $1.6
billion; Canadian Government issues of $0.9 billion accounted for most
of the new issues.
Net purchases of outstanding bonds were $0.1 billion, down from
$0.9 billion. U.S. investors continued their large acquisitions of U.K.
gilt-edge bonds--$1.6 billion--in response to favorable British interest
rates and dollar depreciation. Other net purchases were concentrated in
Japanese and German bonds. Offsetting those purchases were net sales of
$0.7 billion to Hong Kong and smaller amounts to Canada, France, the
Netherlands, and the Caribbean area. Redemptions were unchanged at $0.5
billion.
U.S. direct investment outflows increased to $6.3 billion from $5.0
billion. Intercompany debt shifted to net outflows of $1.2 billion from
net inflows of $2.3 billion, as U.S. parent companies resumed or
accelerated repayment of long-term debt to their foreign affiliates.
Equity capital shifted to a net inflow of $1.6 billion from a net
outflow of $0.6 billion, largely reflecting the sale of Canadian and
Latin American affiliates by U.S. petroleum companies. The shift was
partly offset by the acquisition of a British affiliate by a U.S.
insurance company. Reinvested earnings were unchanged at $6.7 billion.
Foreign assets in the United States
Foreign official assets in the United States increased $2.4 billion
compared with an increase of $8.5 billion in the second quarter (table
B). Industrial countries continued to acquire dollar assets early in
the quarter. These acquisitions were partly offset by intervention
sales of dollars assets by some members of the Group of Five following
their meeting in late September. For the quarter, dollar assets of
industrial countries increased $2.8 billion. Assets of non-OPEC
developing countries increased $1.6 billion; several Asian countries
with favorable merchandise trade balances accumulated dollar assets.
Foreign official assets of OPEC members decreased further by $2.0
billion.
Purchases of U.S. Treasury securities by private foreigners
reported by U.S. banks increased to $7.8 billion, compared with $5.1
billion in the second quarter (chart 11). Japanese investors accounted
for purchases of $6.6 billion, compared with $4.8 billion.
Liberalization of investment regulations on Japanese life insurance
companies and pension funds was partly responsible for the increased
Japanese purchases, as were U.S. interest rates, which averaged 430
basis points higher than Japanese rates. Also contributing to the
increase were a mid-June decision by the Japanese Government to permit
Japanese investors to buy U.S. Treasury zero coupon bonds and proposed
changes in Japanese tax law that would tax returns on principal on those
securities as capital gains rather than ordinary income.
Liabilities to private foreigners and international financial
institutions reported by U.S. banks, excluding U.S. Treasury
securities, increased $6.5 billion compared with a $0.2 billion
increase. The increase in banks' own liabilities continued to be
restrained as U.S. banks' requirements for short-term funding from
abroad remained limited. The limited placement of funds in the United
States coincided with U.S. interest rates that were below or only
marginally higher than several key foreign rates. More than offsetting
a $4.8 billion decrease in liabilities to own foreign offices in the
United Kingdom and Caribbean was a $7.2 billion increase in liabilities
to own foreign offices and unaffiliated banks in other countries, of
which a $3.4 billion increase to Japan may have been related to the
easing of capital controls in that country. In addition, dollar
depreciation in the quarter led to a rise in foreign
currency-denominated liabilities that accounted for nearly one-third of
the total increase in U.S. bank-reported liabilities.
Net foreign purchases of U.S. securities other than U.S. Treasury
issues increased to a record $11.6 billion from $7.1 billion. New
foreign bond issues of U.S. corporations surged to a record $10.2
billion from $5.3 billion, and net foreign purchases of U.S. stocks
increased to $1.4 billion from $0.4 billion. The large volume of new
bond issues abroad partly reflected a strong increase in demand for
longterm financing by prime U.S. corporations. The increase was partly
to replace relatively high-cost short-term bank financing used in
large-scale mergers and acquisitions and partly to take advantage of
yields on Eurobonds that were more than 2 percentage points below a year
earlier. A number of developments served to reduce or eliminate
exchange rate losses to foreign purchasers from a depreciating dollar: a
step-up in bonds denominated in Japanese yen, interest rate and foreign
currency swap features, and dual-currency issues with interest payments
and redemption of principal in foreign currencies. Floating-rate notes,
especially those issued by U.S. bank holding companies, remained strong,
as banks attempted to bolster capital-asset ratios in response to U.S.
bank supervisory pressures.
The increase in net foreign purchases of U.S. stocks was
concentrated early in the quarter when U.S. stock prices advanced.
Dollar depreciation, which made U.S. stock prices cheaper to foreign
investors, contributed to the increase. Investors in the United Kingdom
and Germany, who had been net sellers of stocks since the second quarter
of 1984, accounted for $0.7 billion and $0.2 billion of net purchases,
respectively. Investors in Canada, the Caribbean, and Hong Kong
accounted for most remaining purchases.
Inflows for foreign direct investment in the United States were
$5.6 billion compared with $6.7 billion. The decrease reflected reduced
intercompany transactions. Equity capital inflows were virtually
unchanged; about one-half of the third-quarter inflows were from the
United Kingdom and Bermuda, and they included the British acquisitions
of a U.S. insurance affiliate directly and a paper manufacturing company
through a Bermuda holding company. A shift from net inflows to outflows
to Canada was partly due to a U.S. affiliate's purchase of its own
stock from its Canadian parent. Intercompany debt inflows were $2.3
billion, down from $3.2 billion; in the second quarter, a British
company had completed financial arrangements for an earlier purchase of
a U.S. company. Reinvested earnings were $0.9 billion compared with
$1.1 billion.
Reconciliation of United States-Canadian
current-account statistics
Reconciliation of the 1984 bilateral current-account statistics of
the United States and Canada and revision of the 1983 current-account
reconciliation were completed in November 1985 (table E). The United
States and Canadian statistics were fully reconciled for 1983. Full
reconciliation of the 1984 statistics was not possible because of
differences in investment income transactions that could not be
satisfactorily resolved at that time.
Revisions in the U.S. international transactions data based on the
reconciliations with Canada will be incorporated in the published data
in June 1986 as far as possible. Full substitution of the reconciled
data for the previously published data is not possible because U.S.
transactions with other areas would be affected.
Current-account reconciliations for the years 1970-82 appear in the
June 1975, September 1976, September 1977, December 1979, June 1981 and
December 1981-84 issues of the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS.
Technical Note
BEA has revised its merchandise exports and imports series for the
first quarter of 1983 through the second quarter of 1985. The revision
was necessary because the Census Bureau data, upon which the BEA
estimates are based, have been recalculated to reflect more accurately
the actual movement of merchandise. For BEA's estimates, for 1983
and 1984, imports are now recorded in the month in which they were
actually released from Customs; exports are now recorded in the actual
month of shipment. Previously, both imports and exports were recorded
on the basis of the "statistical month"--that is, the month in
which documents were processed by the Census Bureau.
Complete source data are not yet available for the first three
quarters of 1985. Therefore, estimates are prepared on an interim, or
"revised statistical month" basis, which more closely
approximates the actual month of release from Customs or of shipment
than does the "statistical month" basis. On the "revised
statistical month" basis, all documents carried over from previous
months will be allocated to the immediately preceding month. For
example, documents processed by Census for the statistical month of
October that do not have an October date of shipment for exports will be
allocated to September. When complete source data become available, all
documents will be allocated to the proper month.
Revised estimates, both adjusted and unadjusted for seasonal
variation, are presented in table 3.
Complete source data will normally become available after the close
of the calendar year. Estimates on the "actual" basis will be
completed in the second quarter of the following calendar year. These
estimates, to be published in the June SURVEY, will replace the
previously published "revised statistical month" estimates.
Seasonal factors will be recalculated in the spring of each year and
applied to the "actual month" estimates published in the June
SURVEY.
Source data are not available for BEA to construct revised
estimates prior to January 1983, although the same timing problem may
have existed earlier. Thus, there is a break in series beginning in
January 1983. Another break in series occurs in February 1983, when the
Census Bureau changed the date for tabulating import data from a date of
importation basis to a date of release basis. The date of importation
is the date that a vessel enters the Customs area; the date of release
is the date that merchandise is released to the importer. The date of
importation can precede the date of release by as much as 20 days. When
the import data for January 1983 were retabulated, a
discontinuity--probably due to the change in date for tabulating--became
apparent. The value of documents allocated to 1982 was twice as large
as the value of documents in subsequent months that were added to
January. This discontinuity was corrected by a special adjustment which
added $3.4 billion in January. This figure was based on information
provided by the Census Bureau, and has been distributed by area and
commodity in sections B and C of table 3.
Lines 1 and 9 of Section A of table 3 now represent BEA's
estimates of transactions on the f.a.s-Customs valuation basis, based
upon information supplied by the Census Bureau. Previously, published
Census estimates were shown, but Census no longer publishes the data on
the timing basis required by BEA. Consequently, the line showing the
difference between seasonally adjusted estimates prepared by Census and
BEA is no longer necessary and has been dropped from the table.
The accompanying table compares previous and revised estimates.
Revisions to quarterly estimates were substantial in some instances,
while revisions over longer periods of time were small. For exports,
the revisions were 0.5 percent and 0.2 percent of total transactions in
1983 and 1984, respectively. For imports, the revisions were 2.3
percent and 1.6 percent. The average quarterly difference, without
respect to sign, was 0.9 percent in 1983 and 0.3 percent in 1984 for
exports, and 2.6 percent and 4.4 percent for imports.
The larger revisions for imports than for exports may be due to the
different procedures used to process the two sets of documents. Export
declarations for shipments are normally transmitted to the Customs
Service along with the ship's manifest at the time the vessel
departs. Customs then transmits copies of these declarations to the
Census Bureau for verification and tabulation. Import documents, on the
other hand, are processed separately by Customs for each shipment.
Processing of import documents is often more time consuming and,
therefore, leads to more delays in their transmission to Census. In
addition, there has been a more rapid increase in the number of import
documents. In 1983, Census processed an average of 465,500 import
documents monthly, 567,000 in 1984, and 570,000 to date in 1985, while
export documents processed increased from an average of 667,000 in 1983
to 717,000 in 1984 and to 675,000 to date in 1985.