It seems that the phase of so-called "slowest exports recovery" since World War II in Canada is moving to an end, as the nation's trade deficit shrank more than expected in June, supported by a strong rebound in exports, Statistics Canada said Tuesday. Canada's trade gap stood at C$469 million in June, compared with a revised C$781 million registered a month earlier. Economists forecast the June's deficit to reach C$510 million. The main reason for such an upbeat figures were strong exports, as Canadian merchandise overseas sales jumped 1.4% to C$39.6 billion, while imports edged higher 0.6% to C$40 billion. The main contributors to export growth were shipments of precious metals, passenger cars aircraft as well as light trucks.