| March 2012 |
Total Exports To Slovenia
| Rank | Commodity | Total YTD Exports |
|---|---|---|
1 | Coal, briquettes | $25,265,660 |
2 | Oil, not crude | $21,069,398 |
3 | Electric motor, generator parts | $8,381,986 |
4 | Low value shipments | $4,423,850 |
5 | Synthetic rubber, including butadiene | $4,378,027 |
6 | Medical instruments for surgeons, dentists, vets | $2,889,671 |
7 | Pumps for dispensing liquids | $2,166,516 |
8 | Isotope-separating machinery, nuclear equipment | $1,933,083 |
9 | Petroleum products | $1,385,000 |
10 | Electrical supplies, apparatus, more than 1000V | $1,362,582 |
Total Imports From Slovenia
| Rank | Commodity | Total YTD Imports |
|---|---|---|
1 | Medicine | $27,265,909 |
2 | Refrigerators, freezers | $6,007,850 |
3 | Aluminum bars and rods | $5,751,548 |
4 | Electric ignition equipment | $5,000,184 |
5 | Misc. steel bars | $4,737,636 |
6 | Electric motors, generators, not sets | $4,238,959 |
7 | Seats, excluding barber, dental | $3,781,399 |
8 | Polyurethanes | $3,426,705 |
9 | Electric motor, generator parts | $3,301,073 |
10 | Stainless steel, not less than 600mm wide | $3,282,245 |
| March 2012 |
Top Slovenia Trading Partners
| Rank | District | Total YTD |
|---|---|---|
1 | New York City | $40,698,518 |
2 | New Orleans | $31,705,612 |
3 | Philadelphia | $30,063,331 |
4 | Atlanta/Savannah | $20,156,409 |
5 | Norfolk/Mobile/Charleston | $18,745,588 |
6 | Houston | $15,717,624 |
7 | Norfolk | $15,511,850 |
8 | Chicago | $11,481,615 |
9 | Cleveland | $10,466,764 |
10 | Baltimore | $9,375,285 |
Top US Trading Partners
| Rank | Country | Total YTD |
|---|---|---|
1 | CANADA | $153,987,495,076 |
2 | MEXICO | $122,398,351,478 |
3 | CHINA | $120,983,448,879 |
4 | JAPAN | $54,762,867,594 |
5 | GERMANY | $38,277,050,668 |
6 | UNITED KINGDOM | $28,840,373,748 |
7 | SOUTH KOREA | $25,150,256,689 |
8 | BRAZIL | $19,088,773,913 |
9 | SAUDI ARABIA | $18,638,133,172 |
10 | FRANCE | $17,857,130,070 |
Slovenia’s trade rose to $240,729,366 through March
Slovenia’s trade with the United States rose to $240,729,366 through the first three months of 2012, according to a WorldCity analysis of latest U.S. Census Bureau data. That’s 18.23 percent above its total trade during the same time period last year. Slovenia’s exports increased 21.18 percent while imports rose 16.02 percent. The U.S. deficit with Slovenia was $29,018,452.
Through March, Slovenia’s top U.S. Customs districts for total imports and exports were No. 1 New York City, No. 2 New Orleans, No. 3 Philadelphia, No. 4 Atlanta/Savannah and No. 5 Norfolk/Mobile/Charleston compared to last year when the top spots were held by No. 1 New York City, No. 2 Philadelphia, No. 3 Norfolk/Mobile/Charleston, No. 4 New Orleans and No. 5 Houston. In the current time period, the top five accounted for 70.28 percent of Slovenia’s U.S. trade.. That compares to 44.02 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 Slovenia,:
- Trade with No. 1 New York City rose 3.54 percent to $40,698,518.
Exports fell -13.86 percent to $10,146,386. Imports rose 10.99 percent to $30,552,132. - Trade with No. 2 New Orleans rose 77.48 percent to $31,705,612.
Exports rose 84.08 percent to $29,066,360. Imports rose 27.27 percent to $2,639,252. - Trade with No. 3 Philadelphia rose 5.65 percent to $30,063,331.
Exports fell -23.58 percent to $762,522. Imports rose 6.71 percent to $29,300,809. - Trade with No. 4 Atlanta/savannah rose 75.24 percent to $20,156,409.
Exports rose 25.92 percent to $5,098,324. Imports rose 102.03 percent to $15,058,085. - Trade with No. 5 Norfolk/mobile/charleston fell -25.28 percent to $18,745,588.
Exports fell -25.28 percent to $18,745,588. Imports fell to $0.
Through March, 11 Customs districts posted trade surpluses with Slovenia while 28 had deficits. That compares with 13 surpluses and 26 deficits for the same period one year ago. The top surplus was with New Orleans at $26,427,108, the largest deficit was with Philadelphia at $-28,538,287.
Meanwhile, total U.S. trade with the world increased to $934,379,177,983, up 8.63 percent compared to the same period last year. The nation’s exports climbed 3.54 percent to $30,467,217,700; imports rose 5.09 percent to $43,800,507,934. The nation’s top five countries so far this year, by value, are Canada, Mexico, China, Japan and Germany. The overall trade deficit was $-171,264,242,143, up compared to the same period of last year when the deficit was $-157,930,951,909.
The top five U.S. exports to Slovenia by value through March were coal, briquettes; oil, not crude; electric motor, generator parts; low value shipments; and synthetic rubber, including butadiene, respectively. They accounted for 60.01 percent of total exports to Slovenia.
The value of the top five U.S. imports from Slovenia -- medicine; refrigerators, freezers; aluminum bars and rods; electric ignition equipment; and misc. steel bars -- accounted for 36.15 percent of all inbound shipments.
Looking more closely at U.S. exports to Slovenia:
- Coal, briquettes fell -35.63 percent compared to last year to $25,265,660.
- Oil, not crude rose 157,746.85 percent compared to last year to $21,069,398.
- Electric motor, generator parts rose 63,588.06 percent compared to last year to $8,381,986.
- Low value shipments rose 16.34 percent compared to last year to $4,423,850.
- Synthetic rubber, including butadiene fell -33.37 percent compared to last year to $4,378,027.
Looking more closely at U.S. imports from Slovenia
- Medicine rose 9.49 percent compared to last year to $27,265,909.
- Refrigerators, freezers rose 44.62 percent compared to last year to $6,007,850.
- Aluminum bars and rods rose 42.25 percent compared to last year to $5,751,548.
- Electric ignition equipment rose 25.18 percent compared to last year to $5,000,184.
- Misc. steel bars fell -6.12 percent compared to last year to $4,737,636.
In the latest annual figures available, Slovenia recorded $203,603,149 in trade with the United States. At year’s end, its top five Customs districts were New York City, Houston, Philadelphia, Norfolk/Mobile/Charleston and Atlanta/Savannah. Total U.S. exports to Slovenia were $573,714,654 and imports from Slovenia were $544,772,586. The U.S. surplus with Slovenia was $28,942,068.
