| March 2013 |
Top Exports To Anguilla
Total Exports To Anguilla: $7,789,354| Rank | Commodity | Total YTD Exports |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Low value shipments | $997,026 |
| 2 | Furniture, parts | $816,418 |
| 3 | Refrigerators, freezers | $420,850 |
| 4 | Yachts and other boats | $334,500 |
| 5 | Landline, cellular phone equipment | $264,249 |
| 6 | Poultry, fresh, chilled or frozen | $214,768 |
| 7 | Oil, not crude | $174,190 |
| 8 | Petroleum gases, other gaseous hydrocarbons | $166,939 |
| 9 | Sweetened waters | $162,313 |
| 10 | Wood, sawed or chipped, greater than 6 meters thic | $128,212 |
Total Imports From Anguilla
Total Imports From Anguilla: $987,937| Rank | Commodity | Total YTD |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rum, gin, vodka, other liquors | $397,997 |
| 2 | Imports of returned exports | $333,947 |
| 3 | Centrifuges, filters, machines and parts | $66,997 |
| 4 | Salvage | $43,925 |
| 5 | Aluminum waste and scrap | $43,125 |
| 6 | Scrap of precious metal | $35,107 |
| 7 | Taps, cocks and valves for pipes, tanks | $17,814 |
| 8 | Paintings, drawings and other artwork | $12,875 |
| 9 | TVs, TV equipment, camcorders, digital cameras | $12,429 |
| 10 | Lead Waste and Scrap 7802 | $6,600 |
| March 2013 |
Top Anguilla Trading Partners
Total Anguilla trade: $8,777,291| Rank | District | Total YTD |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Miami | $3,791,559 |
| 2 | Low Value Shipments | $1,040,951 |
| 3 | Jacksonville/Tampa | $1,040,869 |
| 4 | San Juan | $906,614 |
| 5 | New Orleans | $414,744 |
| 6 | Philadelphia | $397,271 |
| 7 | Laredo | $347,656 |
| 8 | Norfolk | $194,358 |
| 9 | Los Angeles | $171,483 |
| 10 | New York City | $127,214 |
Top US Trading Partners
Total U.S. trade for all countries: $919,560,909,009| Rank | Commodity | Total YTD Exports |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | CANADA | $154,229,781,187 |
| 2 | CHINA | $125,331,233,626 |
| 3 | MEXICO | $120,297,325,224 |
| 4 | JAPAN | $50,070,697,561 |
| 5 | GERMANY | $37,936,556,982 |
| 6 | SOUTH KOREA | $25,435,797,164 |
| 7 | UNITED KINGDOM | $24,776,181,741 |
| 8 | FRANCE | $17,448,501,187 |
| 9 | BRAZIL | $16,436,596,270 |
| 10 | SAUDI ARABIA | $15,342,397,281 |
Anguilla’s trade rose to $8,777,291 through March
Anguilla’s trade with the United States rose to $8,777,291 through the first three months of 2013, according to a WorldCity analysis of latest U.S. Census Bureau data. That’s 19.35 percent above its total trade during the same time period last year. Anguilla’s exports increased 21.74 percent while imports rose 3.37 percent. The U.S. deficit with Anguilla was $0.
Through March, Anguilla’s top U.S. Customs districts for total imports and exports were No. 1 Miami, No. 2 Low Value Shipments, No. 3 Jacksonville/Tampa, No. 4 San Juan and No. 5 New Orleans compared to last year when the top spots were held by No. 1 Miami, No. 2 San Juan, No. 3 Low Value Shipments, No. 4 Laredo and No. 5 New York City. In the current time period, the top five accounted for 22.00 percent of Anguilla’s U.S. trade.. That compares to 2.22 percent for the nation’s top five Customs districts during the same time period.Taking a closer look at the leading U.S. gateways for U.S. trade with Anguilla,:
- Trade with No. 1 Miami fell -10.70 percent to $3,791,559.
Exports fell -12.11 percent to $3,626,825. Imports rose 38.19 percent to $164,734. - Trade with No. 2 Low Value Shipments rose 17.78 percent to $1,040,951.
Exports rose 17.77 percent to $997,026. Imports rose 18.07 percent to $43,925. - Trade with No. 3 Jacksonville/tampa rose 557.18 percent to $1,040,869.
Exports rose 557.18 percent to $1,040,869. Imports fell to $0. - Trade with No. 4 San Juan rose 0.54 percent to $906,614.
Exports rose 6.09 percent to $888,522. Imports fell -71.86 percent to $18,092. - Trade with No. 5 New Orleans rose 110.11 percent to $414,744.
Exports rose 104.03 percent to $145,090. Imports rose 113.53 percent to $269,654.
Through March, 14 Customs districts posted trade surpluses with Anguilla while 3 had deficits. That compares with 9 surpluses and 5 deficits for the same period one year ago. The top surplus was with Miami at $3,462,091, the largest deficit was with Laredo at $-347,656.
Meanwhile, total U.S. trade with the world decreased to $919,560,909,009, down -1.59 percent compared to the same period last year. The nation’s exports climbed 0.19 percent to $1,773,047,307; imports dropped -1.78 percent to $-16,591,316,281. The nation’s top five countries so far this year, by value, are Canada, China, Mexico, Japan and Germany. The overall trade deficit climbed $-152,899,878,555, down compared to the same period of last year when the deficit was $-171,264,242,143.
The top five U.S. exports to Anguilla by value through March were low value shipments; furniture, parts; refrigerators, freezers; yachts and other boats; and landline, cellular phone equipment, respectively. They accounted for 36.37 percent of total exports to Anguilla.
The value of the top five U.S. imports from Anguilla -- rum, gin, vodka, other liquors; imports of returned exports; centrifuges, filters, machines and parts; salvage; and aluminum waste and scrap -- accounted for 89.68 percent of all inbound shipments.
Looking more closely at U.S. exports to Anguilla:
- Low value shipments rose 17.77 percent compared to last year to $997,026.
- Furniture, parts rose 627.57 percent compared to last year to $816,418.
- Refrigerators, freezers rose 79.76 percent compared to last year to $420,850.
- Yachts and other boats rose compared to last year to $334,500.
- Landline, cellular phone equipment fell -23.16 percent compared to last year to $264,249.
Looking more closely at U.S. imports from Anguilla
- fell compared to last year to $0.
- fell compared to last year to $0.
- fell compared to last year to $0.
- fell compared to last year to $0.
- fell compared to last year to $0.
In the latest annual figures available, Anguilla recorded $7,354,236 in trade with the United States. At year’s end, its top five Customs districts were Miami, Low Value Shipments, San Juan, Laredo and Jacksonville/Tampa. Total U.S. exports to Anguilla were $27,345,480 and imports from Anguilla were $3,574,428. The U.S. surplus with Anguilla was $23,771,052.
