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Economy & MarketsTuesday, June 23, 2026

Argentina’s export surge widens surplus, while Colombia’s import boom deepens deficit

Divergent trade performances across emerging economies reflect commodity windfalls, supply-chain shifts, and China’s dual role as top buyer and supplier.

Argentina’s merchandise exports hit an all-time monthly high of US$9.54 billion in May 2026, propelling the trade surplus to US$3.5 billion, according to the national statistics agency INDEC. The 34.4 percent year-on-year jump was fuelled by a record harvest that swelled agricultural shipments and by rising crude and gas output from the Vaca Muerta shale formation. External shocks amplified the effect: tensions in the Strait of Hormuz lifted oil and fertiliser prices, while poor harvests in other major producers redirected demand toward Argentine grain and oilseeds. The result was a cumulative surplus of US$11.8 billion for the first five months of the year, a level that alters Argentina’s external position and its capacity to accumulate reserves.

Viewed from Bogotá, the picture is almost a mirror image. Colombian imports climbed 15.8 percent in April to US$6.71 billion, outpacing an 11.7 percent rise in exports and widening the monthly trade deficit by nearly 30 percent to US$1.76 billion. Manufactures accounted for 73.5 percent of inbound shipments, with machinery, transport equipment and chemicals leading the increase. China supplied 25.7 percent of all Colombian imports in April, and 29 percent in the January–April period, driven by a 131.9 percent surge in passenger vehicle purchases and steep rises in laptops and motorcycles. Free-trade zones offered a partial counter-narrative: their exports jumped 35.7 percent in April, with the United States as the dominant destination, though the cumulative surplus for the zones remained well below the previous year’s level.

Indonesia, by contrast, sustained a trade surplus of US$5.64 billion over January–April 2026, with exports growing 5.48 percent to US$92.15 billion. Manufacturing, particularly processed industrial goods, provided the backbone, and China remained the largest export market. Yet the surplus masks a structural vulnerability that industry figures in Central Java highlight: around 70 percent of raw materials for export-oriented manufacturing are imported, chiefly from China and East Asia. Rising logistics costs and dependence on imported inputs are compressing margins and, according to the regional exporters’ association, eroding the competitiveness of Indonesian products.

These three trajectories illustrate how a single global trade environment produces sharply different local outcomes. Argentina is riding a commodity price and volume wave that has also opened unusual channels—sunflower seed exports to Bulgaria and Romania surged by several thousand percent after European harvest failures. Colombia’s deficit reflects an import-intensive consumption and investment cycle, with China consolidating its role as the principal supplier. Indonesia’s surplus, though solid, rests on a manufacturing base that remains tethered to imported components. The next factual milestone for all three is the release of mid-year trade and current-account data, which will show whether these divergences are narrowing or becoming entrenched.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

24%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressSoutheast Asian press
Latin American press/ Market
TriumphPragmatism

Argentina strengthens its position as a global agri-food powerhouse: sunflower oil is finding new outlets in Eastern Europe, driven by a climate that is redrawing trade routes. Record export figures confirm an adaptive capacity that turns a climate challenge into a competitive edge. Market diversification rewards the sector's resilience and opens up long-term growth prospects.

Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Global trade routes are being reconfigured by climate pressures, and Argentine sunflower oil reaching Eastern Europe signals new flows that could affect Southeast Asia's logistics balance. Analysts are closely watching the impact on regional supply chains and trade surpluses amid shifting global demand. The diversification of agricultural sources demands constant monitoring to safeguard the competitiveness of Asian trade corridors.

Related articles

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Upd. 05:04 AM3 languages · 6 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
6 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Argentina’s export surge widens surplus, while Colombia’s import boom deepens deficit

Divergent trade performances across emerging economies reflect commodity windfalls, supply-chain shifts, and China’s dual role as top buyer and supplier.

Argentina’s merchandise exports hit an all-time monthly high of US$9.54 billion in May 2026, propelling the trade surplus to US$3.5 billion, according to the national statistics agency INDEC. The 34.4 percent year-on-year jump was fuelled by a record harvest that swelled agricultural shipments and by rising crude and gas output from the Vaca Muerta shale formation. External shocks amplified the effect: tensions in the Strait of Hormuz lifted oil and fertiliser prices, while poor harvests in other major producers redirected demand toward Argentine grain and oilseeds. The result was a cumulative surplus of US$11.8 billion for the first five months of the year, a level that alters Argentina’s external position and its capacity to accumulate reserves.

Viewed from Bogotá, the picture is almost a mirror image. Colombian imports climbed 15.8 percent in April to US$6.71 billion, outpacing an 11.7 percent rise in exports and widening the monthly trade deficit by nearly 30 percent to US$1.76 billion. Manufactures accounted for 73.5 percent of inbound shipments, with machinery, transport equipment and chemicals leading the increase. China supplied 25.7 percent of all Colombian imports in April, and 29 percent in the January–April period, driven by a 131.9 percent surge in passenger vehicle purchases and steep rises in laptops and motorcycles. Free-trade zones offered a partial counter-narrative: their exports jumped 35.7 percent in April, with the United States as the dominant destination, though the cumulative surplus for the zones remained well below the previous year’s level.

Indonesia, by contrast, sustained a trade surplus of US$5.64 billion over January–April 2026, with exports growing 5.48 percent to US$92.15 billion. Manufacturing, particularly processed industrial goods, provided the backbone, and China remained the largest export market. Yet the surplus masks a structural vulnerability that industry figures in Central Java highlight: around 70 percent of raw materials for export-oriented manufacturing are imported, chiefly from China and East Asia. Rising logistics costs and dependence on imported inputs are compressing margins and, according to the regional exporters’ association, eroding the competitiveness of Indonesian products.

These three trajectories illustrate how a single global trade environment produces sharply different local outcomes. Argentina is riding a commodity price and volume wave that has also opened unusual channels—sunflower seed exports to Bulgaria and Romania surged by several thousand percent after European harvest failures. Colombia’s deficit reflects an import-intensive consumption and investment cycle, with China consolidating its role as the principal supplier. Indonesia’s surplus, though solid, rests on a manufacturing base that remains tethered to imported components. The next factual milestone for all three is the release of mid-year trade and current-account data, which will show whether these divergences are narrowing or becoming entrenched.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 6 outlets · 3 languages

24%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable86%
Neutral14%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressSoutheast Asian press
Latin American press/ Market
TriumphPragmatism

Argentina strengthens its position as a global agri-food powerhouse: sunflower oil is finding new outlets in Eastern Europe, driven by a climate that is redrawing trade routes. Record export figures confirm an adaptive capacity that turns a climate challenge into a competitive edge. Market diversification rewards the sector's resilience and opens up long-term growth prospects.

Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Global trade routes are being reconfigured by climate pressures, and Argentine sunflower oil reaching Eastern Europe signals new flows that could affect Southeast Asia's logistics balance. Analysts are closely watching the impact on regional supply chains and trade surpluses amid shifting global demand. The diversification of agricultural sources demands constant monitoring to safeguard the competitiveness of Asian trade corridors.

This story appeared in

6 outlets · 3 languages

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