Key Points
- Exports rose 7.9% in November to $56.4 billion, keeping Mexico’s manufacturing-led growth engine in the lead.
- Non-oil exports climbed 10.5% and produced a $663 million trade surplus, but seasonally adjusted shipments slipped from October.
- Oil exports plunged 40.4% and capital-goods imports fell 16.7%, hinting at strains in state-heavy sectors and future investment.
Mexico ended November with a stronger trade headline. Goods exports climbed 7.9% from a year earlier to $56.4 billion, while imports increased 5.2% to $55.7 billion.
The result was a $663 million monthly surplus, a cushion in a global economy wrestling with uneven demand. The lift came from the part of Mexico’s economy that competes, delivers, and gets paid: non-oil exports rose 10.5% to $54.9 billion.
Manufactured goods, the backbone of the country’s North American supply-chain role, advanced 10.9% to $52.1 billion. Inside that, the composition matters.
Auto exports slipped 2.1% to $15.8 billion, but the rest of manufacturing jumped 17.7% to $36.3 billion, signaling momentum beyond cars.
Mexico’s Export Machine Accelerates, While Oil And Investment Flash Warning Signs. (Photo Internet reproduction)
Geography tells its own story. The United States absorbed 83.74% of Mexico’s non-oil exports. Those shipments grew 8.5% year on year.
Mexico exports surge, but oil and investment lag
Exports to the rest of the world rose 20.9%, impressive, but from a smaller base. Mexico’s advantage remains its ability to produce at scale next door to the world’s largest consumer market.
Yet the same report carried soft spots that deserve attention. Oil exports collapsed 40.4% to $1.55 billion. Mexico’s export blend averaged $57.66 a barrel, and crude export volumes fell to about 597,000 barrels per day.
That combination reduces hard-currency inflows and underscores how fragile the hydrocarbons pillar has become. On the import side, intermediate goods rose 8.7% to $42.9 billion, consistent with factories pulling in inputs.
Consumer goods increased 2.5% to $8.4 billion. But capital goods fell 16.7% to $4.36 billion, a sign of delayed equipment purchases and cooler investment appetite.
There was also a near-term brake: in seasonally adjusted terms, total exports declined 2.96% from October, with non-oil exports down 3.01%.
Mexico’s export engine is running strong. The question is whether policymakers reinforce what works, or double down on the parts that keep underperforming.