Japan posts larger trade deficit in April-September period Japan’s trade deficit for the first six months of fiscal 2024 widened from a year earlier, due to high energy prices and a weaker yen. It was the seventh time in a row that the country ran a deficit for a half-year period.

The Finance Ministry says the shortfall for the April-to-September period stood at 3.1 trillion yen, or more than 20 billion dollars. That was 14 percent higher in yen terms from a year earlier.

Exports rose 6.6 percent to 53.5 trillion yen, or nearly 360 billion dollars. That was a record for a half-year period.

The major factor was higher shipments of semiconductor manufacturing equipment and electronic parts to China and Hong Kong.

Imports were up 7 percent to around 56.6 trillion yen, or nearly 380 billion dollars.

This was mainly due to higher energy prices and a nearly 10-percent slide in the yen’s value against the dollar from a year earlier.

Comments are closed.