Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
International

Canada begins to diversify its trade, but U.S. tariffs still a 'heavy weight'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2025 11:19 AM
  • Canada begins to diversify its trade, but U.S. tariffs still a 'heavy weight'

Canada's efforts to broaden trade beyond the United States appear to be bearing fruit, but economists warn it will be a long road before Canadian exporters settle at a new status quo.

Statistics Canada said Thursday that the country's merchandise trade deficit — the difference between how much we ship out and how much we bring in — narrowed to $5.9 billion in May as gold exports climbed higher.

The result compares with a trade deficit of $7.6 billion seen in April — a record high, which StatCan said Thursday was revised up from initial estimates of $7.1 billion.

Canadian exports got a boost in the early part of 2025 as businesses rushed to get ahead of U.S. tariffs, but that pull-forward has left weaker activity in April and May. After a relatively strong start to the year, real gross domestic product figures from StatCan show a 0.1 per cent decline in April and early estimates suggest there was a similar decline in May.

"Despite what the numbers would say on a monthly basis, the fact is that the trade backdrop does remain a challenge," said Shelly Kaushik, senior economist at BMO.

Excluding the bump from metal and non-metallic mineral products, total exports fell 1.2 per cent in May as exports to the United States dropped 0.9 per cent.

StatCan said U.S. exports declined for the fourth consecutive month in May amid the ongoing trade dispute. Imports also fell for a third straight month.

Canada's share of exports headed to the U.S. was 68.3 per cent in May, down from the 2024 monthly average of 75.9 per cent.

A StatCan spokesperson said this is the lowest proportion of exports heading south of the border since the agency started keeping track in 1997, excluding the pandemic years.

Kaushik said that, as it still accounts for more than two thirds of exports, the United States remains Canada's biggest export market — and likely will for the foreseeable future.

Even with a variety of tariffs in place, particularly on steel and aluminum industries, Kaushik said that many businesses will still find it a better deal to sell their goods across the enormous Canada-U.S. land border rather than ship overseas or even cross-country.

"It's just a matter the fact that they're our largest neighbour, but they're also the largest economy in the world," she said.

"If this desire to diversify away from the United States is sustained, that's still going to take many months or even years to do."

StatCan said that exports to countries other than the United States rose 5.7 per cent in the month to reach an all-time high.

Total exports were up 1.1 per cent in May at $60.8 billion as exports of metal and non-metallic mineral products increased 15.1 per cent in May.

Driving the change was a 30.1 per cent increase in exports of unwrought gold, silver and platinum group metals and their alloys — a category largely composed of unwrought gold.

Most of that increase was pegged to higher physical shipments of gold to the United Kingdom, StatCan said.

Total merchandise trade to nations other than the U.S. hit $47.6 billion in May, which the agency said was a third consecutive all-time high.

In addition to U.K.-bound gold, StatCan said higher shipments of crude oil to Singapore and unwrought aluminum and pharmaceuticals to Italy were offset by declines in exports to China.

Andrew DiCapua, principal economist with the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said in a statement Thursday that trade diversification gains are "encouraging," but the obstacles at the U.S. border won't be undone quickly.

"The worst may be behind us, but the road back will likely be uneven," he said.

At the G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta., last month, Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to hammer out a renewed trade pact with an eye to a July 21 deadline.

Kaushik noted previous deadlines in the trade dispute have come and gone with barely any clarity materializing since what she called the "peak" of uncertainty in April.

Though May's trade figures mark an improvement from April, Kaushik said the monthly data can be volatile.

And while BMO expects there will be a bit more certainty on the trade front as the year goes on, she said Canada's exporters are going to continue to struggle.

"I think the big picture still has it as pretty clear that trade is going to remain quite challenged with this highly uncertain trade environment," Kaushik said. "That's going to continue to be heavy weight on the Canadian economy."

Meanwhile, total imports fell 1.6 per cent in May to $66.7 billion as imports of metal and non-metallic mineral products dropped 16.8 per cent. Imports of unwrought gold, silver, and platinum group metals plunged 43.2 per cent.

In volume terms, total exports rose 0.7 per cent in May, while total imports fell 0.6 per cent for the month.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Paul Sancya

MORE International ARTICLES

21 year old Indian student, Kunal Kapoor, from Punjab dies in Australia car crash

21 year old Indian student, Kunal Kapoor, from Punjab dies in Australia car crash
Kunal Chopra was returning from work when his Hyundai Getz collided head-on with a concrete pumping truck on William Hovell Drive last week, SBS Punjabi, a multicultural and multilingual broadcaster in Australia, reported. The Australian Capital Territory Ambulance Service paramedics declared Chopra dead on the scene.

21 year old Indian student, Kunal Kapoor, from Punjab dies in Australia car crash

Indian-origin driver charged for killing 4 Sikh men in Australia crash

Indian-origin driver charged for killing 4 Sikh men in Australia crash
Harinder Singh Randhawa, who is recuperating in the hospital under police custody, was driving a Peugeot with four passengers inside when it collided with a Toyota Hilux ute at an intersection at Pine Lodge, near Shepparton earlier this month, the SBS Punjabi channel reported. Randhawa will be appearing in Melbourne Magistrates' Court on June 8.

Indian-origin driver charged for killing 4 Sikh men in Australia crash

Vigil held for 9 year-old Indian-American boy allegedly slain by father

Vigil held for 9 year-old Indian-American boy allegedly slain by father
More than 200 people held a candlelight vigil in McKinney, Texas, in the memory of a nine year-old Indian-origin boy who was allegedly stabbed to death by his father last week.Subramanian Ponnazhakan, 39, was booked on capital murder charge and his bail was set at $1 million, the McKinney Police said.

Vigil held for 9 year-old Indian-American boy allegedly slain by father

9 in 10 adults from India, US admit to cyberbullying: Study

9 in 10 adults from India, US admit to cyberbullying: Study
Among the 313 respondents from the US and India, more than half said they often do cyberbullying while only 6 per cent said they had never committed cyberbullying. Educated and married people, irrespective of their gender, were most likely to commit cyberbullying more frequently, but demographics were not the only factors at play. 

9 in 10 adults from India, US admit to cyberbullying: Study

Reckless driver jailed for killing Sikh woman in UK

Reckless driver jailed for killing Sikh woman in UK
Hashim Aziz was driving at over three times the speed limit to "impress his cousins" when his Audi A3 crashed into Baljinder Kaur Moore's Vauxhall Corsa in West Midlands, in November last year, the Mirror reported. Baljinder, 32, was on her way to pick up her husband from his brother's home, and she was driving at 62 mph.

Reckless driver jailed for killing Sikh woman in UK

Indian-American doc pays $1,850,000 for performing unnecessary tests, surgeries

Indian-American doc pays $1,850,000 for performing unnecessary tests, surgeries
From January 1, 2011 to December 31, 2016, Pandya knowingly submitted false claims to federal healthcare programmes for medically unnecessary cataract extraction surgeries and YAG laser capsulotomies, according to a Justice Department release.

Indian-American doc pays $1,850,000 for performing unnecessary tests, surgeries