
Shipments of products from Mexico to the United States grew at an annual rate of 3.5% in February, reaching US$41.639 billion, the Census Bureau reported Thursday.
Mexican product exports to the United States grew at an annual rate of 3.5% in February, reaching US$41.639 billion, the Census Bureau reported Thursday.
Conversely, Mexican imports from the United States fell 0.1% to US$26.754 billion.
With these results, Mexico remained the United States' largest trading partner, with a combined import and export flows of 14.7 percent.
The corresponding coverages of the next two largest U.S. trading partners were as follows: Canada (13.7%) and China (10.0 percent).
Canada exported US$34.925 billion in merchandise to the U.S. market, a 4.6% increase, while China shipped US$31.635 billion in merchandise to the same destination, a 0.8% decrease year-on-year.
On the other hand, US exports to its northern neighbor totaled US$28.318 billion, a 0.6% decrease, while those to the Chinese market totaled US$10.462 billion, a 12.9% decrease.
These results occurred as US President Donald Trump continued to implement a series of new tariffs that are changing the global trade landscape.
In February 2025, total product imports to the United States reached US$288.167 billion, an 18.8% increase over the same month in 2024.
Its exports in the same month amounted to US$167.609 billion, a year-on-year increase of 0.3%.