Trade Balance Overview
Seasonally Adjusted Balance: A deficit of $1,841 million (down from a $5,026 million surplus in February).
Total Change: A massive swing of $6,867 million.
Historical Context: This is Australia's first trade deficit since December 2017.
Original Basis: Remained a surplus of $1,241 million, highlighting the heavy impact of seasonal adjustments and specific one-off import surges.
Exports (Goods Credits)
Total exports fell by 2.7% ($1,214 million) to a total of $43,929 million.
Rural Goods: Suffered a sharp 11.6% decline, led by the "Other rural" category.
Non-Monetary Gold: Decreased by 6.1%, contributing to the overall drop in value.
Volume vs. Value Paradox: Interestingly, while total value fell, the quantities of major commodities actually grew significantly:
Iron Ore: Fines up 16.4%; Lump up 11.4%.
Coal: Coking, thermal, and semi-soft quantities grew between 13.6% and 14.7%.
LNG: Volumes rose by 13.8%.
Imports (Goods Credits)
Total imports surged by 14.1% ($5,652 million) to reach $45,770 million.
The "AI Factor": Automatic Data Processing (ADP) equipment was the primary driver, with imports in this sector exploding by 300% (a $2.9 billion increase) as companies ramp up AI infrastructure.
Capital Goods: Recorded a massive 36.8% increase.
Gold Imports: Jumped by 35.0%, adding to the volatility.
Fuel Commodities:
Crude Petroleum: Quantities surged 40.8%.
Gasoline: Quantities rose 18.8%.
Declines: Diesel volumes fell 11.6% and aviation fuel fell 6.9%.