Dairy exports - to China in particular - helped propel May exports to a record high and meant the monthly trade surplus was slightly wider than expected.
Exports rose 8.5 per cent to $5.8 billion on the year in May while imports rose 7.6 per cent to $5.5b. The May trade surplus was $264 million. The annual trade balance was a $5.49b deficit versus a revised $5.56 billion deficit for the 12 months through April. It was $3.7b in the year ended May 2018.
Economists polled by Bloomberg had expected a surplus of $200m in May and an annual trade deficit of $5.5b.
Dairy products led the rise in exports. They reached $1.3b in May, up 15 per cent from the same month a year earlier.
The rise was led by milk powder, up $155m on a year earlier. It was quantity-led but unit values also rose, up 3.9 per cent on May 2018. In contrast, milk fats including butter fell $58m.