EMBARGOED UNTIL RELEASE AT 8:30 A.M. EDT, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 2018 BEA 18-28 Technical: Michelle Murillo (301) 278-9133 Michelle.Murillo@bea.gov Media: Ann Norris (301) 278-9003 Ann.Norris@bea.gov U.S. International Transactions: First Quarter 2018 and Annual Update Current-Account Balance The U.S. current-account deficit increased to $124.1 billion (preliminary) in the first quarter of 2018 from $116.1 billion (revised) in the fourth quarter of 2017, according to statistics released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). The deficit was 2.5 percent of current-dollar gross domestic product (GDP) in the first quarter, up from 2.4 percent in the fourth quarter. [--CHART1 IMAGE--] The $8.0 billion increase in the current-account deficit reflected an $8.1 billion increase in the deficit on goods and relatively small and nearly offsetting changes in the balances on services, primary income, and secondary income. [--CHART2 IMAGE--] Current-Account Transactions (tables 1-5) Exports of goods and services and income receipts Exports of goods and services and income receipts increased $23.0 billion in the first quarter to $913.4 billion. * Primary income receipts increased $9.8 billion to $258.8 billion, reflecting increases in direct investment income, portfolio investment income, and other investment income. For more information on direct investment income, see the box “Effects of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on Components of Direct Investment.” * Goods exports increased $9.5 billion to $411.4 billion, mostly reflecting increases in automotive vehicles, parts, and engines, in consumer goods, primarily jewelry and collectibles, and in nonmonetary gold. Imports of goods and services and income payments Imports of goods and services and income payments increased $30.9 billion in the first quarter to $1,037.5 billion. * Goods imports increased $17.6 billion to $631.9 billion, mostly reflecting increases in industrial supplies and materials, primarily petroleum and products, and in consumer goods, primarily medicinal, dental, and pharmaceutical products. * Primary income payments increased $10.2 billion to $196.8 billion, reflecting increases in direct investment income, portfolio investment income, and other investment income. BOX.___________________________________________________________________________________________ Effects of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on Components of Direct Investment In the international transactions accounts, income on equity, or earnings, of foreign affiliates of U.S. multinational enterprises in a period typically consists of a portion that is repatriated to the parent company in the United States in the form of dividends and a portion that is reinvested in foreign affiliates. At times, repatriation of dividends exceeds current-period earnings, resulting in negative values being recorded for reinvested earnings. In the first quarter of 2018, direct investment earnings were $130.6 billion, reflecting dividends and withdrawals of $305.6 billion and reinvested earnings of -$175.0 billion (table 4). The large magnitudes for dividends and withdrawals and the negative reinvested earnings reflect the repatriation of accumulated earnings by foreign affiliates of U.S. multinational enterprises to their parent companies in the United States in response to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA). The TCJA requires U.S. parent companies to pay a one-time tax on their accumulated earnings held abroad, but generally eliminates taxes on repatriated earnings. The negative reinvested earnings of -$175.0 billion reflect the fact that dividends exceeded earnings in the first quarter and U.S parent companies withdrew accumulated prior earnings from their foreign affiliates. The negative reinvested earnings are also reflected in the net acquisition of direct investment assets in the financial account, which was -$119.7 billion* in the first quarter of 2018 (table 6). For more information, see “How does the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act affect BEA's business income statistics? (www.bea.gov/faq/index.cfm?faq_id=1293&searchQuery=&start=0&cat_id=0)” and “How are the international transactions accounts affected by an increase in direct investment dividend receipts? (www.bea.gov/faq/index.cfm?faq_id=166)” [--CHART3 IMAGE--] *This number was originally reported as -$119.6 billion; it was corrected on June 28, 2018. _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Financial Account (tables 1, 6, 7, and 8) Net U.S. borrowing measured by financial-account transactions was $180.6 billion in the first quarter, an increase from net borrowing of $31.3 billion in the fourth quarter. Financial assets Net U.S. acquisition of financial assets excluding financial derivatives increased $127.6 billion in the first quarter to $254.7 billion. * Net U.S. acquisition of portfolio investment assets increased $277.2 billion to $365.5 billion, reflecting net U.S. purchases of foreign equity and investment fund shares following net sales in the fourth quarter. * Net U.S. acquisition of other investment assets was $8.9 billion following net liquidation of $50.9 billion in the fourth quarter. This change mostly reflected net U.S. provision of loans to foreigners following net foreign repayment in the fourth quarter. * Net U.S. withdrawal of direct investment assets was $119.7 billion following net U.S. acquisition of $91.3 billion in the fourth quarter. This change partly offset the changes in portfolio investment assets and other investment assets. The net withdrawal of direct investment assets reflected U.S. parent repatriation of previously reinvested earnings in response to the TCJA. For more information, see the box “Effects of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act on Components of Direct Investment.” Liabilities Net U.S. incurrence of liabilities excluding financial derivatives increased $304.9 billion in the first quarter to $464.1 billion. * Net U.S. incurrence of portfolio investment liabilities increased $210.5 billion to $292.1 billion, mostly reflecting net foreign purchases of U.S. equity and investment fund shares following net foreign sales in the fourth quarter. * Net U.S. incurrence of direct investment liabilities increased $59.1 billion to $97.3 billion, mostly reflecting net U.S. incurrence of debt instrument liabilities following net repayment in the fourth quarter. * Net U.S. incurrence of other investment liabilities increased $35.3 billion to $74.6 billion, reflecting partly offsetting changes in transactions in loan and deposit liabilities. Net U.S. incurrence of loan liabilities in the first quarter followed net repayment in the fourth quarter. Net foreign withdrawal of deposits in the United States followed net incurrence in the fourth quarter. Financial derivatives Transactions in financial derivatives other than reserves reflected first-quarter net lending of $28.7 billion, a $27.9 billion increase from the fourth quarter. Statistical Discrepancy (table 1) The statistical discrepancy was -$56.5 billion in the first quarter following a statistical discrepancy of $84.9 billion in the fourth quarter. Updates to Fourth Quarter 2017 International Transactions Accounts Aggregates Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted Preliminary estimate Revised estimate Current-account balance -128.2 -116.1 Goods balance -214.3 -212.4 Services balance 60.4 64.6 Primary-income balance 57.2 62.4 Secondary-income balance -31.5 -30.7 Net lending (+)/borrowing (-) from financial-account transactions -29.8 -31.3 Statistical discrepancy 98.4 84.9 Annual Update of the International Transactions Accounts (table 9) The statistics in this release reflect the annual update of the U.S. international transactions accounts. With this update, BEA has incorporated improved estimation methodologies, newly available and revised source data, and updated seasonal adjustments. Key changes to the statistics are summarized below and in table 9. * The revised statistics on the international transactions accounts incorporate newly available and revised source data for 2014–2017 and for additional years for selected components as described below. * Revised statistics on exports of goods reflect an improved method for estimating exports under the U.S. Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program. Beginning with statistics for 2010, BEA is no longer replacing FMS exports in the U.S. Census Bureau’s merchandise trade statistics with data from the U.S. Department of Defense. This change in methodology also affects the financial account because the value of exports of FMS goods is recorded under general government trade credits and advances as a reduction in the liabilities of the U.S. government. U.S. government liabilities, which reflect pre-payments made by foreign purchasers, are reduced when the foreign purchaser takes ownership of the goods. * Revised statistics on exports of government goods and services reflect an improved method for estimating exports of goods and services under U.S. military grant programs. BEA has identified that cash grants disbursed through the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund program are included in the source data for government goods and services and has removed them beginning with statistics for 2010. These cash grants are captured in BEA’s source data on U.S. government grants and recorded as a debit in secondary income payments in the current account and as a credit in other investment liabilities in the financial account. No adjustment to other investment is necessary because these cash grants, while not identifiable, are captured in BEA’s source data on financial transactions. * Revised statistics on direct investment positions, transactions in financial assets and liabilities, and related income receipts and payments for 2014–2017 incorporate the results of BEA’s 2014 Benchmark Survey of U.S. Direct Investment Abroad. This survey collects data on the U.S. and foreign operations of all U.S. investors that own 10 percent or more of a foreign business enterprise. For more information, see “Activities of U.S. Multinational Enterprises in the United States and Abroad: Preliminary Results From the 2014 Benchmark Survey (www.bea.gov/scb/pdf/2016/12%20December/1216_activities_of_us_multinational_enterprises.pdf)” in the December 2016 issue of the Survey of Current Business. * Revised statistics on exports of travel services for 2015–2017 incorporate adjustments to address an undercount of foreign visitors to the United States in BEA’s source data. For more information, see “How did the International Trade Administration’s suspension of I-94 arrivals data releases affect BEA’s statistics? (www.bea.gov/faq/index.cfm?faq_id=1298&searchQuery=&start=0&cat_id=0)” Newly Available and Revised Source Data: Key Providers and Years Affected BEA: * Benchmark Survey of U.S. Direct Investment Abroad (2014–2017) * Quarterly international services surveys (2015–2017) * Quarterly direct investment surveys (2015–2017) * Annual direct investment surveys (2015–2017) U.S. Census Bureau: * Foreign Military Sales (2010-2017) * Revised source data for Census-basis goods (2015–2017) U.S. Customs and Border Protection * BEA adjustments to source data on country of residency of visitors to the United States (2015–2017) * Number of U.S. citizens traveling abroad (2016–2017) U.S. Department of the Treasury: * Annual and benchmark surveys from the Treasury International Capital system (2016–2017) A more detailed discussion of the new estimation methodologies and other changes appears in “Preview of the 2018 Annual Update of the International Economic Accounts (www.bea.gov/scb/2018/05-may/0518-preview-2018-annual-update-international-economic-accounts.htm)” in the May 2018 issue of the Survey of Current Business. Additional information on the updates to the U.S. international transactions accounts and the U.S. international investment position accounts will be provided in the July issue of the Survey of Current Business. Next release: September 19, 2018 at 8:30 A.M. EDT U.S. International Transactions, Second Quarter 2018 Additional Information Resources * Stay informed about BEA developments by reading the BEA blog (blog.bea.gov), signing up for BEA’s email subscription service (www.bea.gov/_subscribe/index_vocus.htm), or following BEA on Twitter @BEA_News (twitter.com/BEA_News). * Historical time series for these estimates can be accessed in BEA’s interactive data application (www.bea.gov/iTable/index_ita.cfm). * Access BEA data by registering for BEA’s data application programming interface (www.bea.gov/API/signup/index.cfm) (API). * For more on BEA’s statistics, see our monthly online journal, the Survey of Current Business (www.bea.gov/scb/index.htm). * BEA's news release schedule (www.bea.gov/newsreleases/news_release_schedule.htm). * More information on these international transactions statistics will be provided next month in the Survey of Current Business (www.bea.gov/scb/index.htm). * More information on the international transactions accounts (ITAs) and a description of the estimation methods used to compile them is provided in U.S. International Economic Accounts: Concepts and Methods (www.bea.gov/international/concepts_methods.htm). Definitions The current account consists of transactions between U.S. residents and nonresidents in goods, services, primary income, and secondary income. Goods are physical items with ownership rights that can be exchanged among institutional units through transactions. Services transactions consist of transactions arising from productive activities that change the condition of the consumer or that facilitate the exchange of products and financial assets. Primary income transactions include investment income and compensation of employees. Investment income is the return on holdings of financial assets and includes direct investment income, portfolio investment income, other investment income, and income on reserve assets. Compensation of employees is income for the contribution of labor inputs to the production process. Secondary income consists of current transfers between residents and nonresidents. Unlike an exchange, a transfer is a transaction in which a good, service, or asset is provided without a corresponding return of economic value. Secondary income receipts and payments include U.S. government and private transfers, such as U.S. government grants and pensions, fines and penalties, withholding taxes, personal transfers (remittances), insurance-related transfers, and other current transfers. The capital account consists of capital transfers between residents and nonresidents and the cross-border acquisition and disposal of nonproduced nonfinancial assets. Capital transfers include debt forgiveness and certain disaster-related nonlife insurance claims. Nonproduced nonfinancial assets include natural resources and contracts, leases, and licenses. Capital- account transactions are distinguished from current-account transactions in that capital- account transactions result in a change in the assets of one or both parties to the transaction without affecting the income or savings of either party. The financial account consists of transactions between U.S. residents and nonresidents for direct investment, portfolio investment, other investment, reserves, and financial derivative other than reserves. Direct investment is a category of cross-border investment associated with a resident in one economy having control or a significant degree of influence on the management of an enterprise resident in another economy. Ownership or control of 10 percent or more of the nonresident entity’s voting securities is the threshold for separating direct investment from other types of investment. Direct-investment transactions include transactions in equity (including reinvestment of earnings) and debt instruments. Portfolio investment transactions consist of cross-border transactions involving equity and investment fund shares and debt securities, excluding those included in direct investment or reserve assets. Other investment is a residual category that includes cross-border financial instruments other than those included in direct investment, portfolio investment, financial derivatives, and reserve assets. Other-investment transactions consist of transactions in currency and deposits, loans, insurance technical reserves, trade credit and advances, and, for liabilities, special drawing rights allocations. Reserve assets are those external assets that are readily available to and controlled by monetary authorities for meeting balance of payments financing needs, for intervention in exchange markets to affect the currency exchange rate, and for other related purposes such as maintaining confidence in the currency and the economy and serving as a basis for foreign borrowing. The major published components are monetary gold, International Monetary Fund (IMF) special drawing rights (SDRs), reserve position in the IMF, and other reserve assets. Financial derivatives other than reserves consist of financial contracts that are linked to underlying financial instruments, commodities, or indicators. Transactions in financial derivatives consist of U.S. cash receipts and payments arising from the sale, purchase, periodic settlement, or final settlement of financial derivatives contracts. Transactions in financial derivatives are only available as a net value equal to transactions for assets less transactions for liabilities. A positive value represents net cash payments by U.S. residents to foreign residents from settlements of derivatives contracts (net lending) and a negative value represents net U.S. cash receipts (net borrowing). The statistical discrepancy is the difference between net acquisition of assets and net incurrence of liabilities in the financial account (including financial derivatives) less the difference between total credits and total debits recorded in the current and capital accounts. The statistical discrepancy can also be calculated as the difference between net lending (borrowing) measured from financial-account transactions and net lending (borrowing) measured from current- and capital-account transactions. The current-account balance is the difference between credits (exports and income receipts) and debits (imports and income payments) in the current account. The balance is a net measure of current-account transactions between the United States and the rest of the world. A positive balance indicates a current-account surplus. A negative balance indicates a current-account deficit. Net lending (borrowing) measures the balance of funds supplied to the rest of the world. Net lending means that, in net terms, the U.S. economy supplies funds to the rest of the world. Net borrowing means the opposite. Net lending (borrowing) can be measured by current- and capital- account transactions or by financial-account transactions. Conceptually, the two measures are equal. In practice, the two measures differ by the statistical discrepancy. Release and update cycle Preliminary quarterly statistics for the ITAs are released in March, June, September, and December approximately 80 days after the end of the reference quarter. These statistics are updated the following quarter to incorporate new source data. Quarterly statistics are open for revision for at least the prior three years in annual updates released in June. Preliminary annual statistics are released in March along with statistics for the fourth quarter of the previous year. These annual statistics are open for revision for at least the prior three years in subsequent annual updates. Related statistics The ITAs constitute one part of a broader set of U.S. international economic accounts that, taken together, provide a comprehensive, integrated, and detailed picture of U.S. international economic activities. The international investment position (IIP) accounts (www.bea.gov/newsreleases/international/intinv/intinvnewsrelease.htm) are released quarterly. Financial transactions that are reported in the ITAs are one type of change in position that are recorded in the IIP accounts. Statistics on direct investment and multinational enterprises (www.bea.gov/iTable/index_MNC.cfm)(MNEs) include annual statistics on the activities of MNEs, detailed annual and quarterly statistics on direct investment, and annual statistics on new investment in the United States. Statistics on international services (www.bea.gov/iTable/iTableHtml.cfm?reqid=62&step=9&isuri=1&6210=4), released annually, include detailed annual information on trade in services and on services supplied through the channel of direct investment by affiliates of MNEs. U.S. international trade in goods and services (www.bea.gov/newsreleases/international/trade/tradnewsrelease.htm), released by BEA and the U.S. Census Bureau, provides monthly statistics on trade in goods and services. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ List of News Release Tables Table 1. U.S. International Transactions Table 2. U.S. International Trade in Goods Table 3. U.S. International Trade in Services Table 4. U.S. International Transactions in Primary Income Table 5. U.S. International Transactions in Secondary Income Table 6. U.S. International Financial Transactions for Direct Investment Table 7. U.S. International Financial Transactions for Portfolio Investment Table 8. U.S. International Financial Transactions for Other Investment Table 9. Updates to U.S. International Transactions June 20, 2018 Table 1. U.S. International Transactions [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I   Current account 1 Exports of goods and services and income receipts (credits) ........................................ 3,183,783 3,433,239 249,456 834,569 839,280 868,997 890,393 913,358 22,965 1 2 Exports of goods and services .................................................................... 2,215,844 2,351,072 135,228 576,306 579,743 589,107 605,916 619,243 13,327 2 3 Goods .......................................................................................... 1,456,957 1,553,383 96,426 381,138 382,492 387,814 401,939 411,416 9,477 3 4 General merchandise .......................................................................... 1,436,115 1,531,639 95,524 374,911 376,756 382,828 397,143 404,919 7,776 4 5 Foods, feeds, and beverages ................................................................ 130,519 132,744 2,225 32,685 33,752 34,209 32,099 33,338 1,239 5 6 Industrial supplies and materials .......................................................... 387,350 456,188 68,838 109,751 110,346 111,819 124,271 125,403 1,132 6 7 Capital goods except automotive ............................................................ 519,890 533,574 13,684 130,366 130,882 134,985 137,341 138,209 868 7 8 Automotive vehicles, parts, and engines .................................................... 150,311 157,641 7,330 39,755 39,047 39,078 39,761 42,207 2,446 8 9 Consumer goods except food and automotive .................................................. 193,254 197,134 3,880 49,250 49,198 48,879 49,807 51,598 1,791 9 10 Other general merchandise .................................................................. 54,791 54,358 -433 13,104 13,531 13,858 13,866 14,163 297 10 11 Net exports of goods under merchanting ....................................................... 300 200 -100 51 47 47 56 47 -9 11 12 Nonmonetary gold ............................................................................. 20,542 21,544 1,002 6,176 5,689 4,940 4,740 6,450 1,710 12 13 Services ....................................................................................... 758,888 797,690 38,802 195,168 197,252 201,293 203,977 207,828 3,851 13 14 Maintenance and repair services n.i.e. ....................................................... 25,004 26,430 1,426 6,903 6,574 6,213 6,740 7,171 431 14 15 Transport .................................................................................... 84,679 88,598 3,919 21,663 21,756 22,483 22,696 23,116 420 15 16 Travel (for all purposes including education) /1/ ............................................ 206,902 210,747 3,845 51,947 52,391 52,980 53,429 53,800 371 16 17 Insurance services ........................................................................... 17,067 18,047 980 4,192 4,392 4,708 4,755 4,862 107 17 18 Financial services ........................................................................... 99,384 109,642 10,258 26,111 26,854 27,927 28,751 29,443 692 18 19 Charges for the use of intellectual property n.i.e. .......................................... 124,734 128,364 3,630 31,115 32,214 32,273 32,762 33,359 597 19 20 Telecommunications, computer, and information services ....................................... 38,548 42,219 3,671 10,241 10,341 10,735 10,902 11,184 282 20 21 Other business services ...................................................................... 143,768 154,313 10,545 38,165 37,886 38,936 39,326 40,144 818 21 22 Government goods and services n.i.e. ......................................................... 18,801 19,329 528 4,831 4,844 5,037 4,617 4,748 131 22 23 Primary income receipts .......................................................................... 830,174 928,118 97,944 217,567 223,979 237,632 248,940 258,786 9,846 23 24 Investment income .............................................................................. 823,709 921,816 98,107 215,984 222,406 236,058 247,367 257,193 9,826 24 25 Direct investment income ..................................................................... 456,426 504,404 47,978 120,189 120,486 127,799 135,929 137,995 2,066 25 26 Portfolio investment income .................................................................. 326,325 354,406 28,081 83,011 86,627 91,154 93,614 98,978 5,364 26 27 Other investment income ...................................................................... 40,850 62,620 21,770 12,725 15,158 16,996 17,741 20,051 2,310 27 28 Reserve asset income ......................................................................... 108 385 277 59 135 109 82 169 87 28 29 Compensation of employees ...................................................................... 6,466 6,302 -164 1,582 1,573 1,573 1,573 1,593 20 29 30 Secondary income (current transfer) receipts /2/ ................................................. 137,764 154,049 16,285 40,696 35,557 42,258 35,537 35,329 -208 30 31 Imports of goods and services and income payments (debits) ......................................... 3,616,656 3,882,380 265,724 942,278 961,117 972,445 1,006,541 1,037,464 30,923 31 32 Imports of goods and services .................................................................... 2,717,846 2,903,349 185,503 711,265 716,443 721,899 753,742 774,870 21,128 32 33 Goods .......................................................................................... 2,208,008 2,360,878 152,870 579,484 582,440 584,637 614,317 631,934 17,617 33 34 General merchandise .......................................................................... 2,189,848 2,348,675 158,827 576,137 579,845 581,849 610,844 629,125 18,281 34 35 Foods, feeds, and beverages ................................................................ 131,024 138,810 7,786 33,720 34,470 35,069 35,551 37,014 1,463 35 36 Industrial supplies and materials .......................................................... 441,848 511,561 69,713 128,569 125,834 123,450 133,707 142,001 8,294 36 37 Capital goods except automotive ............................................................ 593,854 643,620 49,766 153,271 157,945 163,218 169,186 170,589 1,403 37 38 Automotive vehicles, parts, and engines .................................................... 351,058 359,849 8,791 90,254 89,551 89,455 90,589 92,885 2,296 38 39 Consumer goods except food and automotive .................................................. 585,177 603,922 18,745 148,763 149,365 148,197 157,597 164,007 6,410 39 40 Other general merchandise .................................................................. 86,887 90,913 4,026 21,560 22,679 22,460 24,214 22,630 -1,584 40 41 Nonmonetary gold ............................................................................. 18,160 12,203 -5,957 3,347 2,594 2,789 3,473 2,809 -664 41 42 Services ....................................................................................... 509,838 542,471 32,633 131,781 134,004 137,261 139,426 142,936 3,510 42 43 Maintenance and repair services n.i.e. ....................................................... 8,731 8,337 -394 2,138 2,136 2,004 2,059 2,016 -43 43 44 Transport .................................................................................... 96,939 101,744 4,805 25,200 25,319 25,352 25,872 26,284 412 44 45 Travel (for all purposes including education) /1/ ............................................ 123,569 135,024 11,455 32,779 33,525 33,813 34,906 35,615 709 45 46 Insurance services ........................................................................... 49,900 50,665 765 12,318 12,820 13,094 12,434 12,095 -339 46 47 Financial services ........................................................................... 25,752 28,931 3,179 6,750 7,076 7,478 7,628 7,965 337 47 48 Charges for the use of intellectual property n.i.e. .......................................... 46,577 51,284 4,707 12,042 12,298 13,136 13,808 15,318 1,510 48 49 Telecommunications, computer, and information services ....................................... 37,391 40,054 2,663 9,900 9,805 10,068 10,280 10,465 185 49 50 Other business services ...................................................................... 99,476 104,385 4,909 25,133 25,549 26,774 26,929 27,607 678 50 51 Government goods and services n.i.e. ......................................................... 21,503 22,047 544 5,520 5,477 5,541 5,510 5,572 62 51 52 Primary income payments .......................................................................... 637,151 706,386 69,235 164,962 175,444 179,410 186,569 196,775 10,206 52 53 Investment income .............................................................................. 618,013 686,699 68,686 160,123 170,545 174,430 181,601 191,803 10,202 53 54 Direct investment income ..................................................................... 183,812 205,976 22,164 46,358 52,298 51,342 55,978 58,914 2,936 54 55 Portfolio investment income .................................................................. 407,603 432,510 24,907 104,489 106,870 109,845 111,305 115,353 4,048 55 56 Other investment income ...................................................................... 26,599 48,213 21,614 9,276 11,377 13,243 14,317 17,536 3,219 56 57 Compensation of employees ...................................................................... 19,139 19,687 548 4,839 4,899 4,980 4,969 4,972 3 57 58 Secondary income (current transfer) payments /2/ ................................................. 261,659 272,645 10,986 66,051 69,229 71,136 66,229 65,819 -410 58 Capital account 59 Capital transfer receipts and other credits ........................................................ 0 24,788 24,788 0 0 24,788 0 0 0 59 60 Capital transfer payments and other debits ......................................................... 59 42 -17 1 0 1 40 n.a. n.a. 60   Financial account 61 Net U.S. acquisition of financial assets excluding financial derivatives (net increase in assets / financial outflow (+)) ....................................... 348,625 1,182,749 834,124 366,101 315,922 373,591 127,135 254,728 127,593 61 62 Direct investment assets ......................................................................... 312,975 379,222 66,247 135,054 49,976 102,936 91,256 -119,662 -210,918 62 63 Equity ......................................................................................... 336,657 352,504 15,847 89,319 92,569 69,079 101,537 -170,162 -271,699 63 64 Debt instruments ............................................................................... -23,683 26,718 50,401 45,735 -42,593 33,857 -10,281 50,500 60,781 64 65 Portfolio investment assets ...................................................................... 36,283 586,695 550,412 141,783 180,700 175,910 88,301 365,467 277,166 65 66 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. 21,743 166,827 145,084 32,119 110,542 63,399 -39,233 242,518 281,751 66 67 Debt securities ................................................................................ 14,541 419,868 405,327 109,664 70,158 112,512 127,534 122,949 -4,585 67 68 Short term ................................................................................... -27,409 193,855 221,264 40,439 38,799 74,149 40,467 21,945 -18,522 68 69 Long term .................................................................................... 41,950 226,013 184,063 69,225 31,359 38,363 87,067 101,004 13,937 69 70 Other investment assets .......................................................................... -2,723 218,522 221,245 89,505 85,095 94,804 -50,883 8,930 59,813 70 71 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... -91,317 171,952 263,269 62,730 25,883 78,488 4,850 -22,575 -27,425 71 72 Loans .......................................................................................... 87,690 40,862 -46,828 21,959 59,564 15,099 -55,760 33,191 88,951 72 73 Insurance technical reserves ................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 73 74 Trade credit and advances ...................................................................... 903 5,708 4,805 4,817 -352 1,217 26 -1,686 -1,712 74 75 Reserve assets ................................................................................... 2,090 -1,690 -3,780 -241 150 -61 -1,539 -7 1,532 75 76 Monetary gold .................................................................................. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 76 77 Special drawing rights ......................................................................... 684 78 -606 11 15 26 26 33 7 77 78 Reserve position in the International Monetary Fund ............................................ 1,348 -1,812 -3,160 -261 82 -98 -1,535 -73 1,462 78 79 Other reserve assets ........................................................................... 58 44 -14 9 54 11 -29 34 63 79 80 Currency and deposits ........................................................................ -56 0 56 0 0 0 0 (*) 0 80 81 Securities ................................................................................... 114 44 -70 9 54 11 -29 34 63 81 82 Financial derivatives ........................................................................ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 82 83 Other claims ................................................................................. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 83 84 Net U.S. incurrence of liabilities excluding financial derivatives (net increase in liabilities / financial inflow (+)) ............................................... 741,529 1,537,683 796,154 429,098 445,338 504,082 159,164 464,054 304,890 84 85 Direct investment liabilities .................................................................... 494,455 354,829 -139,626 112,354 97,118 107,107 38,250 97,344 59,094 85 86 Equity ......................................................................................... 387,599 308,406 -79,193 94,137 77,022 72,927 64,320 62,395 -1,925 86 87 Debt instruments ............................................................................... 106,856 46,423 -60,433 18,217 20,097 34,180 -26,070 34,949 61,019 87 88 Portfolio investment liabilities ................................................................. 231,349 799,182 567,833 160,111 263,170 294,275 81,626 292,084 210,458 88 89 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. -139,700 155,680 295,380 57,471 21,024 80,561 -3,377 150,345 153,722 89 90 Debt securities ................................................................................ 371,049 643,503 272,454 102,640 242,147 213,713 85,003 141,739 56,736 90 91 Short term ................................................................................... -12,092 15,851 27,943 -4,593 15,264 -20,035 25,215 31,354 6,139 91 92 Long term .................................................................................... 383,141 627,652 244,511 107,233 226,882 233,748 59,788 110,385 50,597 92 93 Other investment liabilities ..................................................................... 15,725 383,671 367,946 156,633 85,050 102,701 39,288 74,626 35,338 93 94 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... 17,199 217,427 200,228 61,051 110,745 -15,792 61,423 -1,719 -63,142 94 95 Loans .......................................................................................... -7,574 150,834 158,408 87,071 -25,350 112,549 -23,436 67,255 90,691 95 96 Insurance technical reserves ................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 96 97 Trade credit and advances ...................................................................... 6,101 15,410 9,309 8,511 -346 5,943 1,302 9,090 7,788 97 98 Special drawing rights allocations ............................................................. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 98 99 Financial derivatives other than reserves, net transactions /3/ .................................... 7,827 23,074 15,247 -5,609 9,306 18,600 777 28,678 27,901 99 Statistical discrepancy 100 Statistical discrepancy /4/ ........................................................................ 47,855 92,536 44,681 39,104 1,727 -33,231 84,936 -56,544 -141,480 100 Balances 101 Balance on current account (line 1 less line 31) /5/ ............................................... -432,873 -449,142 -16,269 -107,709 -121,837 -103,447 -116,148 -124,105 -7,957 101 102 Balance on goods and services (line 2 less line 32) .............................................. -502,001 -552,277 -50,276 -134,959 -136,700 -132,791 -147,826 -155,626 -7,800 102 103 Balance on goods (line 3 less line 33) ......................................................... -751,051 -807,495 -56,444 -198,346 -199,948 -196,823 -212,378 -220,518 -8,140 103 104 Balance on services (line 13 less line 42) ..................................................... 249,050 255,219 6,169 63,387 63,248 64,032 64,551 64,892 341 104 105 Balance on primary income (line 23 less line 52) ................................................. 193,023 221,731 28,708 52,604 48,535 58,222 62,371 62,012 -359 105 106 Balance on secondary income (line 30 less line 58) ............................................... -123,895 -118,597 5,298 -25,355 -33,672 -28,878 -30,692 -30,491 201 106 107 Balance on capital account (line 59 less line 60) /5/ .............................................. -59 24,746 24,805 -1 0 24,787 -40 0 40 107 108 Net lending (+) or net borrowing (-) from current- and capital- account transactions (line 101 plus line 107) /6/ .................................................. -432,932 -424,395 8,537 -107,710 -121,837 -78,660 -116,188 -124,105 -7,917 108 109 Net lending (+) or net borrowing (-) from financial-account transactions (line 61 less line 84 plus line 99) /6/ ............................................... -385,078 -331,860 53,218 -68,606 -120,111 -111,891 -31,252 -180,649 -149,397 109 p Preliminary r Revised n.a. Not available (*) Transactions are between zero and +/- $500,000 1. All travel purposes include 1) business travel, including expenditures by border, seasonal, and other short-term workers and 2) personal travel, including health-related and education-related travel. 2. Secondary income (current transfer) receipts and payments include U.S. government and private transfers, such as U.S. government grants and pensions, fines and penalties, withholding taxes, personal transfers (remittances), insurance-related transfers, and other current transfers. 3. Transactions for financial derivatives are only available as a net value equal to transactions for assets less transactions for liabilities. A positive value represents net U.S. cash payments arising from derivatives contracts, and a negative value represents net U.S. cash receipts. 4. The statistical discrepancy, which can be calculated as line 109 less line 108, is the difference between total debits and total credits recorded in the current, capital, and financial accounts. In the current and capital accounts, credits and debits are labeled in the table. In the financial account, an acquisition of an asset or a repayment of a liability is a debit, and an incurrence of a liability or a disposal of an asset is a credit. 5. Current- and capital-account statistics in the international transactions accounts differ slightly from statistics in the national income and product accounts (NIPAs) because of adjustments made to convert the international transactions statistics to national economic accounting concepts. A reconciliation between annual statistics in the two sets of accounts appears in NIPA table 4.3B (www.bea.gov/iTable/iTableHtml.cfm?reqid=19&step=3&isuri=1&1921=survey&1903=136). 6. Net lending means that U.S. residents are net suppliers of funds to foreign residents, and net borrowing means the opposite. Net lending or net borrowing can be computed from current- and capital- account transactions or from financial-account transactions. The two amounts differ by the statistical discrepancy. Notes: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. See international transactions accounts table 1.3 at www.bea.gov/iTable/index_ita.cfm for geographic detail. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 2. U.S. International Trade in Goods [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I 1 Exports of goods (table 1, line 3) ................................................................. 1,456,957 1,553,383 96,426 381,138 382,492 387,814 401,939 411,416 9,477 1 2 General merchandise ............................................................................ 1,436,115 1,531,639 95,524 374,911 376,756 382,828 397,143 404,919 7,776 2 3 Net exports of goods under merchanting ......................................................... 300 200 -100 51 47 47 56 47 -9 3 4 Nonmonetary gold ............................................................................... 20,542 21,544 1,002 6,176 5,689 4,940 4,740 6,450 1,710 4 5 General merchandise, all end-use commodities (line 2) ............................................ 1,436,115 1,531,639 95,524 374,911 376,756 382,828 397,143 404,919 7,776 5 6 Foods, feeds, and beverages .................................................................... 130,519 132,744 2,225 32,685 33,752 34,209 32,099 33,338 1,239 6 7 Agricultural ................................................................................. 122,533 124,204 1,671 30,731 31,658 32,004 29,811 31,086 1,275 7 8 Grains and preparations .................................................................... 27,910 27,568 -342 7,544 7,369 6,516 6,139 7,038 899 8 9 Wheat .................................................................................... 5,537 6,223 686 1,557 1,787 1,458 1,421 1,354 -67 9 10 Corn ..................................................................................... 10,871 10,152 -719 3,045 2,902 2,270 1,934 2,549 615 10 11 Rice and other food grains ............................................................... 1,920 1,833 -87 499 460 389 484 508 24 11 12 Other feeds .............................................................................. 9,582 9,360 -222 2,442 2,219 2,399 2,299 2,626 327 12 13 Soybeans ................................................................................... 23,620 22,225 -1,395 4,799 6,059 6,961 4,406 4,685 279 13 14 Meat products and poultry .................................................................. 16,883 18,838 1,955 4,553 4,546 4,747 4,992 5,134 142 14 15 Vegetables, fruits, nuts, and preparations ................................................. 24,491 25,138 647 6,137 6,154 6,357 6,490 6,605 115 15 16 Other agricultural foods, feeds, and beverages ............................................. 29,628 30,436 808 7,698 7,531 7,423 7,785 7,624 -161 16 17 Nonagricultural .............................................................................. 7,986 8,540 554 1,954 2,093 2,205 2,288 2,252 -36 17 18 Fish and shellfish ......................................................................... 5,641 5,941 300 1,335 1,462 1,555 1,589 1,549 -40 18 19 Distilled beverages and other nonagricultural foods, feeds, and beverages .................. 2,346 2,599 253 619 631 649 699 704 5 19 20 Industrial supplies and materials .............................................................. 387,350 456,188 68,838 109,751 110,346 111,819 124,271 125,403 1,132 20 21 Agricultural ................................................................................. 16,987 19,166 2,179 4,914 4,774 4,642 4,835 5,035 200 21 22 Raw cotton ................................................................................. 3,968 5,846 1,878 1,497 1,487 1,432 1,431 1,694 263 22 23 Tobacco, unmanufactured .................................................................... 1,116 1,086 -30 251 335 339 160 220 60 23 24 Hides and skins, including furskins ........................................................ 1,966 1,919 -47 488 466 492 473 425 -48 24 25 Other agricultural industrial supplies ..................................................... 9,938 10,314 376 2,678 2,487 2,378 2,771 2,696 -75 25 26 Nonagricultural .............................................................................. 370,362 437,022 66,660 104,837 105,572 107,177 119,436 120,369 933 26 27 Energy products ............................................................................ 112,520 160,747 48,227 37,478 38,318 38,716 46,234 46,945 711 27 28 Petroleum and products ................................................................... 99,017 137,456 38,439 31,509 32,441 33,122 40,384 40,071 -313 28 29 Crude .................................................................................. 9,260 22,431 13,171 4,357 4,764 4,916 8,394 8,486 92 29 30 Fuel oil ............................................................................... 33,478 42,861 9,383 9,561 11,005 10,960 11,335 10,214 -1,121 30 31 Other petroleum products ............................................................... 46,942 56,624 9,682 13,808 13,420 13,677 15,719 17,163 1,444 31 32 Liquified petroleum gases .............................................................. 9,337 15,540 6,203 3,783 3,252 3,569 4,935 4,208 -727 32 33 Coal and related products ................................................................ 7,729 13,819 6,090 3,455 3,390 3,486 3,489 3,961 472 33 34 Natural gas .............................................................................. 4,611 8,122 3,511 2,258 2,027 1,723 2,114 2,509 395 34 35 Nuclear fuel and electric energy ......................................................... 1,162 1,350 188 256 461 385 248 404 156 35 36 Paper and paper-base stocks ................................................................ 20,826 22,052 1,226 5,384 5,320 5,530 5,818 5,709 -109 36 37 Textile supplies and related materials ..................................................... 13,436 13,578 142 3,420 3,357 3,384 3,416 3,430 14 37 38 Chemicals except medicinals ................................................................ 103,806 112,015 8,209 27,629 27,202 27,279 29,905 29,434 -471 38 39 Plastic materials ........................................................................ 32,550 34,715 2,165 8,881 8,353 8,360 9,120 9,079 -41 39 40 Fertilizers, pesticides, and insecticides ................................................ 7,455 8,330 875 2,021 2,076 2,009 2,223 2,148 -75 40 41 Industrial inorganic chemicals ........................................................... 8,187 9,203 1,016 2,172 2,237 2,292 2,502 2,569 67 41 42 Industrial organic chemicals ............................................................. 26,307 28,334 2,027 6,990 6,801 6,791 7,752 7,413 -339 42 43 Other chemicals .......................................................................... 29,307 31,433 2,126 7,564 7,736 7,827 8,306 8,225 -81 43 44 Building materials except metals ........................................................... 13,850 14,811 961 3,584 3,605 3,766 3,856 3,814 -42 44 45 Other nonmetals ............................................................................ 33,831 35,396 1,565 8,799 8,722 8,862 9,013 9,148 135 45 46 Metals and nonmetallic products ............................................................ 72,093 78,423 6,330 18,543 19,046 19,640 21,193 21,889 696 46 47 Steelmaking materials .................................................................... 4,948 6,797 1,849 1,527 1,562 1,759 1,948 2,177 229 47 48 Iron and steel products .................................................................. 14,471 16,561 2,090 4,026 4,242 4,062 4,231 4,271 40 48 49 Nonferrous metals ........................................................................ 27,964 29,106 1,142 6,620 6,891 7,351 8,244 8,412 168 49 50 Precious metals except nonmonetary gold ................................................ 5,700 6,631 931 1,327 1,484 1,712 2,108 2,424 316 50 51 Bauxite and aluminum ................................................................... 8,467 7,860 -607 1,860 1,908 1,932 2,160 2,144 -16 51 52 Copper ................................................................................. 6,186 6,173 -13 1,424 1,541 1,554 1,653 1,861 208 52 53 Other nonferrous metals ................................................................ 7,611 8,441 830 2,010 1,957 2,151 2,323 1,982 -341 53 54 Other metals and nonmetallic products .................................................... 24,710 25,959 1,249 6,369 6,352 6,468 6,770 7,029 259 54 55 Capital goods except automotive ................................................................ 519,890 533,574 13,684 130,366 130,882 134,985 137,341 138,209 868 55 56 Machinery and equipment except consumer-type ................................................. 393,495 407,364 13,869 99,907 99,723 102,136 105,598 105,725 127 56 57 Electric-generating machinery, electric apparatus, and parts ............................... 53,624 54,966 1,342 13,812 13,482 13,558 14,113 14,212 99 57 58 Oil-drilling, mining, and construction machinery ........................................... 16,926 17,919 993 4,154 4,166 4,595 5,005 4,818 -187 58 59 Industrial engines, pumps, and compressors ................................................. 25,997 25,249 -748 6,534 6,228 6,162 6,325 6,161 -164 59 60 Machine tools and metalworking machinery ................................................... 6,528 6,680 152 1,661 1,660 1,658 1,700 1,804 104 60 61 Measuring, testing, and control instruments ................................................ 23,062 23,615 553 5,775 5,949 5,820 6,071 6,392 321 61 62 Other industrial machinery ................................................................. 71,941 79,894 7,953 19,181 19,719 20,029 20,966 20,930 -36 62 63 Other service-industry and agricultural machinery .......................................... 16,682 17,701 1,019 4,377 4,294 4,495 4,535 4,648 113 63 64 Computers .................................................................................. 14,756 15,378 622 3,665 3,817 3,842 4,054 4,054 0 64 65 Computer accessories, peripherals, and parts ............................................... 30,307 30,671 364 7,293 7,493 7,647 8,239 8,125 -114 65 66 Semiconductors ............................................................................. 44,346 47,971 3,625 11,632 11,750 11,968 12,622 12,191 -431 66 67 Telecommunications equipment ............................................................... 41,161 38,244 -2,917 9,792 9,011 9,989 9,452 9,435 -17 67 68 Other office and business machines ......................................................... 2,353 2,354 1 580 584 602 587 617 30 68 69 Scientific, hospital, and medical equipment and parts ...................................... 45,811 46,722 911 11,451 11,570 11,773 11,929 12,337 408 69 70 Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ........................................................ 120,929 120,988 59 29,212 29,597 31,642 30,537 31,281 744 70 71 Civilian aircraft, complete, all types ..................................................... 60,673 56,034 -4,639 13,494 13,960 14,811 13,770 14,240 470 71 72 Engines and parts .......................................................................... 60,256 64,953 4,697 15,718 15,637 16,831 16,767 17,041 274 72 73 Other transportation equipment ............................................................... 5,466 5,222 -244 1,246 1,562 1,208 1,206 1,203 -3 73 74 Automotive vehicles, parts, and engines ........................................................ 150,311 157,641 7,330 39,755 39,047 39,078 39,761 42,207 2,446 74 75 To Canada .................................................................................... 58,864 61,591 2,727 15,759 15,148 15,355 15,329 16,739 1,410 75 76 Passenger cars, new and used ............................................................... 14,222 14,347 125 3,737 3,293 3,482 3,835 4,337 502 76 77 Trucks, buses, and special purpose vehicles ................................................ 13,929 16,052 2,123 3,931 3,761 4,309 4,051 4,548 497 77 78 Engines and engine parts ................................................................... 6,097 6,787 690 1,779 1,739 1,612 1,657 1,708 51 78 79 Other parts and accessories ................................................................ 24,615 24,404 -211 6,312 6,355 5,952 5,786 6,145 359 79 80 To other areas ............................................................................... 91,447 96,050 4,603 23,997 23,899 23,724 24,431 25,468 1,037 80 81 Passenger cars, new and used ............................................................... 38,928 38,083 -845 10,105 9,735 8,692 9,550 10,165 615 81 82 Trucks, buses, and special purpose vehicles ................................................ 4,080 4,549 469 1,036 1,074 1,309 1,129 1,073 -56 82 83 Engines and engine parts ................................................................... 11,670 13,240 1,570 3,125 3,367 3,332 3,415 3,613 198 83 84 Other parts and accessories ................................................................ 36,769 40,178 3,409 9,730 9,721 10,390 10,337 10,618 281 84 85 Consumer goods except food and automotive ...................................................... 193,254 197,134 3,880 49,250 49,198 48,879 49,807 51,598 1,791 85 86 Nondurable goods ............................................................................. 88,900 87,648 -1,252 22,546 21,813 21,373 21,916 22,132 216 86 87 Apparel, footwear, and household goods ..................................................... 10,307 10,471 164 2,590 2,552 2,599 2,730 2,738 8 87 88 Medicinal, dental, and pharmaceutical products ............................................. 53,145 51,158 -1,987 13,546 12,859 12,237 12,515 12,865 350 88 89 Toiletries and cosmetics ................................................................... 12,132 12,813 681 3,145 3,145 3,204 3,319 3,260 -59 89 90 Other nondurable goods ..................................................................... 13,317 13,206 -111 3,265 3,257 3,333 3,351 3,269 -82 90 91 Durable goods ................................................................................ 104,354 109,486 5,132 26,704 27,385 27,505 27,891 29,466 1,575 91 92 Televisions, video receivers, and other video equipment .................................... 4,832 4,965 133 1,252 1,308 1,219 1,187 1,153 -34 92 93 Radio and stereo equipment, including recorded media ....................................... 3,870 3,859 -11 982 951 946 980 947 -33 93 94 Toys and sporting goods, including bicycles ................................................ 9,172 9,974 802 2,415 2,413 2,544 2,602 2,594 -8 94 95 Household and kitchen appliances and other household goods ................................. 38,360 41,117 2,757 9,859 10,836 10,066 10,356 10,264 -92 95 96 Household furnishings and related products ............................................... 4,610 4,780 170 1,156 1,188 1,201 1,235 1,196 -39 96 97 Household and kitchen appliances ......................................................... 6,147 6,253 106 1,582 1,533 1,547 1,591 1,660 69 97 98 Other household goods, including cell phones ............................................. 27,604 30,084 2,480 7,121 8,114 7,318 7,530 7,408 -122 98 99 Jewelry and collectibles ................................................................... 23,278 24,354 1,076 6,037 5,673 6,386 6,258 7,409 1,151 99 100 Gem diamonds and other gemstones ........................................................... 21,084 21,039 -45 5,164 5,195 5,271 5,409 5,910 501 100 101 Other durable goods ........................................................................ 3,758 4,177 419 994 1,010 1,073 1,099 1,190 91 101 102 Other general merchandise ...................................................................... 54,791 54,358 -433 13,104 13,531 13,858 13,866 14,163 297 102 103 Net exports of goods under merchanting (line 3) .................................................. 300 200 -100 51 47 47 56 47 -9 103 104 Nonmonetary gold (line 4) ........................................................................ 20,542 21,544 1,002 6,176 5,689 4,940 4,740 6,450 1,710 104 105 Imports of goods (table 1, line 33) ................................................................ 2,208,008 2,360,878 152,870 579,484 582,440 584,637 614,317 631,934 17,617 105 106 General merchandise ............................................................................ 2,189,848 2,348,675 158,827 576,137 579,845 581,849 610,844 629,125 18,281 106 107 Nonmonetary gold ............................................................................... 18,160 12,203 -5,957 3,347 2,594 2,789 3,473 2,809 -664 107 108 General merchandise, all end-use commodities (line 106) .......................................... 2,189,848 2,348,675 158,827 576,137 579,845 581,849 610,844 629,125 18,281 108 109 Foods, feeds, and beverages .................................................................... 131,024 138,810 7,786 33,720 34,470 35,069 35,551 37,014 1,463 109 110 Agricultural ................................................................................. 102,953 108,367 5,414 26,323 26,788 27,412 27,844 29,060 1,216 110 111 Green coffee ............................................................................... 4,788 5,183 395 1,216 1,310 1,374 1,283 1,007 -276 111 112 Cocoa beans and sugar ...................................................................... 3,083 2,848 -235 889 843 496 620 814 194 112 113 Meat products and poultry .................................................................. 10,797 11,065 268 2,592 2,715 2,941 2,818 2,830 12 113 114 Vegetables, fruits, nuts, and preparations ................................................. 33,030 34,912 1,882 8,331 8,600 8,996 8,984 9,268 284 114 115 Wine, beer, and related products ........................................................... 10,754 11,354 600 2,766 2,776 2,897 2,916 2,999 83 115 116 Other agricultural foods, feeds, and beverages ............................................. 40,501 43,006 2,505 10,530 10,544 10,709 11,223 12,141 918 116 117 Nonagricultural .............................................................................. 28,071 30,442 2,371 7,397 7,682 7,657 7,707 7,954 247 117 118 Fish and shellfish ......................................................................... 19,477 21,575 2,098 5,182 5,542 5,407 5,443 5,692 249 118 119 Distilled beverages and other nonagricultural foods, feeds, and beverages .................. 8,594 8,868 274 2,215 2,140 2,249 2,264 2,262 -2 119 120 Industrial supplies and materials .............................................................. 441,848 511,561 69,713 128,569 125,834 123,450 133,707 142,001 8,294 120 121 Agricultural ................................................................................. 11,185 12,269 1,084 2,941 2,957 3,087 3,284 3,209 -75 121 122 Nonagricultural .............................................................................. 430,664 499,292 68,628 125,628 122,877 120,363 130,423 138,792 8,369 122 123 Energy products ............................................................................ 176,071 215,719 39,648 57,982 52,427 49,448 55,863 61,760 5,897 123 124 Petroleum and products ................................................................... 159,578 199,564 39,986 54,170 48,025 45,444 51,926 58,352 6,426 124 125 Crude .................................................................................. 103,939 135,628 31,689 37,520 33,434 29,610 35,063 39,422 4,359 125 126 Fuel oil ............................................................................... 18,007 21,765 3,758 5,644 4,653 5,172 6,297 7,318 1,021 126 127 Other petroleum products ............................................................... 35,467 38,870 3,403 10,062 9,262 9,994 9,552 10,548 996 127 128 Liquified petroleum gases .............................................................. 2,165 3,302 1,137 944 676 668 1,014 1,064 50 128 129 Coal and related products ................................................................ 3,110 2,308 -802 423 701 745 440 330 -110 129 130 Natural gas .............................................................................. 7,229 8,609 1,380 2,165 2,366 2,021 2,058 2,002 -56 130 131 Nuclear fuel and electric energy ......................................................... 6,154 5,238 -916 1,224 1,336 1,239 1,439 1,076 -363 131 132 Paper and paper-base stocks ................................................................ 11,678 11,793 115 2,868 2,888 3,026 3,011 3,090 79 132 133 Textile supplies and related materials ..................................................... 13,986 14,160 174 3,481 3,494 3,539 3,646 3,707 61 133 134 Chemicals except medicinals ................................................................ 69,915 74,725 4,810 17,894 18,594 18,503 19,733 20,677 944 134 135 Plastic materials ........................................................................ 15,874 17,356 1,482 4,125 4,259 4,351 4,621 4,760 139 135 136 Fertilizers, pesticides, and insecticides ................................................ 10,613 11,200 587 3,000 2,758 2,760 2,682 2,992 310 136 137 Industrial inorganic chemicals ........................................................... 6,304 7,241 937 1,710 1,755 1,813 1,962 2,189 227 137 138 Industrial organic chemicals ............................................................. 25,093 26,411 1,318 6,096 6,770 6,437 7,107 7,317 210 138 139 Other chemicals .......................................................................... 12,031 12,517 486 2,963 3,052 3,142 3,360 3,419 59 139 140 Building materials except metals ........................................................... 32,384 35,245 2,861 8,638 8,603 8,634 9,369 9,203 -166 140 141 Other nonmetals ............................................................................ 33,701 36,214 2,513 8,682 8,912 9,118 9,503 9,832 329 141 142 Metals and nonmetallic products ............................................................ 92,929 111,436 18,507 26,084 27,959 28,095 29,298 30,523 1,225 142 143 Steelmaking materials .................................................................... 4,880 8,130 3,250 1,822 2,067 2,082 2,158 2,353 195 143 144 Iron and steel products .................................................................. 33,774 39,487 5,713 9,153 10,271 10,013 10,051 10,487 436 144 145 Nonferrous metals ........................................................................ 32,417 41,005 8,588 9,644 9,888 10,225 11,247 11,494 247 145 146 Precious metals except nonmonetary gold ................................................ 8,726 9,603 877 2,227 2,394 2,260 2,722 2,695 -27 146 147 Bauxite and aluminum ................................................................... 12,391 16,300 3,909 3,746 3,906 4,100 4,549 4,249 -300 147 148 Other nonferrous metals ................................................................ 11,300 15,101 3,801 3,671 3,589 3,865 3,976 4,550 574 148 149 Other metals and nonmetallic products .................................................... 21,858 22,814 956 5,465 5,733 5,775 5,842 6,190 348 149 150 Capital goods except automotive ................................................................ 593,854 643,620 49,766 153,271 157,945 163,218 169,186 170,589 1,403 150 151 Machinery and equipment except consumer-type ................................................. 537,947 587,062 49,115 139,882 144,072 148,782 154,325 156,432 2,107 151 152 Electric-generating machinery, electric apparatus and parts ................................ 70,622 76,118 5,496 18,529 18,861 19,111 19,617 20,071 454 152 153 Oil-drilling, mining, and construction machinery ........................................... 14,710 19,792 5,082 4,017 4,698 5,285 5,792 5,554 -238 153 154 Industrial engines, pumps, and compressors ................................................. 22,471 24,652 2,181 6,002 6,116 6,276 6,259 6,589 330 154 155 Machine tools and metalworking machinery ................................................... 10,906 12,043 1,137 2,802 3,034 2,925 3,282 3,446 164 155 156 Measuring, testing, and control instruments ................................................ 20,177 21,791 1,614 5,204 5,367 5,568 5,651 5,829 178 156 157 Other industrial machinery ................................................................. 83,056 93,719 10,663 22,058 23,057 23,792 24,813 25,291 478 157 158 Other service-industry and agricultural machinery .......................................... 28,882 30,733 1,851 7,426 7,511 7,757 8,039 8,274 235 158 159 Computers .................................................................................. 60,886 69,021 8,135 15,635 17,118 18,576 17,692 19,199 1,507 159 160 Computer accessories, peripherals, and parts ............................................... 53,703 59,487 5,784 14,015 14,468 15,209 15,794 16,256 462 160 161 Semiconductors ............................................................................. 51,783 54,157 2,374 12,894 12,739 13,381 15,143 13,581 -1,562 161 162 Telecommunications equipment ............................................................... 71,922 74,323 2,401 18,800 18,481 17,953 19,090 18,689 -401 162 163 Other office and business machines ......................................................... 5,365 5,360 -5 1,344 1,353 1,358 1,305 1,328 23 163 164 Scientific, hospital, and medical equipment and parts ...................................... 43,464 45,865 2,401 11,156 11,270 11,591 11,848 12,325 477 164 165 Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ........................................................ 50,006 51,390 1,384 12,338 12,574 13,182 13,297 12,726 -571 165 166 Civilian aircraft, complete, all types ..................................................... 13,842 13,740 -102 3,281 3,388 3,503 3,568 2,771 -797 166 167 Engines and parts .......................................................................... 36,164 37,650 1,486 9,056 9,186 9,679 9,729 9,955 226 167 168 Other transportation equipment ............................................................... 5,902 5,168 -734 1,051 1,299 1,254 1,565 1,431 -134 168 169 Automotive vehicles, parts, and engines ........................................................ 351,058 359,849 8,791 90,254 89,551 89,455 90,589 92,885 2,296 169 170 From Canada .................................................................................. 64,920 62,463 -2,457 16,219 16,207 14,928 15,108 15,664 556 170 171 Passenger cars, new and used ............................................................... 45,364 43,278 -2,086 11,338 11,558 10,234 10,149 10,317 168 171 172 Trucks, buses, and special purpose vehicles ................................................ 2,912 3,246 334 770 803 827 846 1,011 165 172 173 Engines and engine parts ................................................................... 3,676 3,458 -218 887 833 819 918 950 32 173 174 Other parts and accessories ................................................................ 12,968 12,481 -487 3,224 3,013 3,049 3,194 3,385 191 174 175 From other areas ............................................................................. 286,138 297,387 11,249 74,035 73,344 74,527 75,481 77,221 1,740 175 176 Passenger cars, new and used ............................................................... 124,938 132,727 7,789 33,103 32,490 33,299 33,836 34,729 893 176 177 Trucks, buses, and special purpose vehicles ................................................ 31,086 33,656 2,570 8,310 8,358 8,631 8,357 7,870 -487 177 178 Engines and engine parts ................................................................... 24,766 25,111 345 6,219 6,202 6,231 6,460 6,774 314 178 179 Other parts and accessories ................................................................ 105,348 105,892 544 26,403 26,294 26,366 26,829 27,848 1,019 179 180 Consumer goods except food and automotive ...................................................... 585,177 603,922 18,745 148,763 149,365 148,197 157,597 164,007 6,410 180 181 Nondurable goods ............................................................................. 279,286 279,526 240 70,177 69,080 68,072 72,197 77,810 5,613 181 182 Apparel, footwear, and household goods ..................................................... 135,990 136,871 881 34,193 33,883 33,953 34,843 35,345 502 182 183 Medicinal, dental, and pharmaceutical products ............................................. 111,734 110,099 -1,635 28,030 27,099 25,985 28,986 33,827 4,841 183 184 Toiletries and cosmetics ................................................................... 10,908 11,658 750 2,791 2,886 2,951 3,030 3,098 68 184 185 Other nondurable goods ..................................................................... 20,655 20,898 243 5,163 5,213 5,184 5,338 5,539 201 185 186 Durable goods ................................................................................ 305,891 324,396 18,505 78,586 80,285 80,125 85,399 86,197 798 186 187 Televisions, video receivers, and other video equipment .................................... 24,074 25,696 1,622 6,417 6,116 6,605 6,558 6,110 -448 187 188 Radio and stereo equipment, including recorded media ....................................... 9,609 9,026 -583 2,414 2,275 2,136 2,200 2,238 38 188 189 Toys and sporting goods, including bicycles ................................................ 36,792 39,048 2,256 9,368 9,604 9,957 10,118 10,751 633 189 190 Household and kitchen appliances and other household goods ................................. 172,605 187,758 15,153 44,921 46,506 45,910 50,421 51,293 872 190 191 Household furnishings and related products ............................................... 33,688 36,821 3,133 9,061 9,168 9,133 9,459 10,077 618 191 192 Household and kitchen appliances ......................................................... 26,992 29,189 2,197 6,890 7,102 7,229 7,969 7,488 -481 192 193 Other household goods, including cell phones ............................................. 111,925 121,747 9,822 28,970 30,235 29,548 32,993 33,728 735 193 194 Jewelry and collectibles ................................................................... 26,876 27,201 325 6,644 6,883 6,655 7,019 6,774 -245 194 195 Gem diamonds and other gemstones ........................................................... 27,539 26,316 -1,223 6,572 6,587 6,492 6,664 6,626 -38 195 196 Other durable goods ........................................................................ 8,396 9,352 956 2,248 2,314 2,369 2,420 2,406 -14 196 197 Other general merchandise ...................................................................... 86,887 90,913 4,026 21,560 22,679 22,460 24,214 22,630 -1,584 197 198 Nonmonetary gold (line 107) ...................................................................... 18,160 12,203 -5,957 3,347 2,594 2,789 3,473 2,809 -664 198 199 Balance on goods (line 1 less line 105) ............................................................ -751,051 -807,495 -56,444 -198,346 -199,948 -196,823 -212,378 -220,518 -8,140 199 p Preliminary r Revised Notes: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. See international transactions accounts tables 2.2-2.4 at www.bea.gov/iTable/index_ita.cfm for additional account and geographic detail. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 3. U.S. International Trade in Services [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I 1 Exports of services (table 1, line 13) ............................................................. 758,888 797,690 38,802 195,168 197,252 201,293 203,977 207,828 3,851 1 2 Maintenance and repair services n.i.e. ........................................................... 25,004 26,430 1,426 6,903 6,574 6,213 6,740 7,171 431 2 3 Transport ........................................................................................ 84,679 88,598 3,919 21,663 21,756 22,483 22,696 23,116 420 3 4 Sea transport .................................................................................. 18,078 18,707 629 4,617 4,644 4,676 4,770 4,817 47 4 5 Freight ...................................................................................... 3,691 3,819 128 937 943 968 971 959 -12 5 6 Port ......................................................................................... 14,386 14,888 502 3,681 3,701 3,707 3,799 3,857 58 6 7 Air transport .................................................................................. 62,049 65,229 3,180 15,995 15,996 16,483 16,755 17,039 284 7 8 Passenger .................................................................................... 39,271 40,613 1,342 10,091 9,978 10,254 10,290 10,312 22 8 9 Freight ...................................................................................... 12,473 13,673 1,200 3,268 3,333 3,490 3,581 3,836 255 9 10 Port ......................................................................................... 10,305 10,943 638 2,636 2,685 2,739 2,883 2,892 9 10 11 Other modes of transport ....................................................................... 4,552 4,662 110 1,051 1,116 1,325 1,171 1,260 89 11 12 Travel (for all purposes including education) /1/ ................................................ 206,902 210,747 3,845 51,947 52,391 52,980 53,429 53,800 371 12 13 Business ....................................................................................... 40,996 39,669 -1,327 9,876 9,931 9,906 9,956 9,918 -38 13 14 Expenditures by border, seasonal, and other short-term workers ............................... 8,505 8,615 110 2,097 2,141 2,191 2,186 2,152 -34 14 15 Other business travel ........................................................................ 32,491 31,053 -1,438 7,779 7,790 7,715 7,770 7,766 -4 15 16 Personal ....................................................................................... 165,906 171,079 5,173 42,071 42,460 43,074 43,473 43,882 409 16 17 Health related ............................................................................... 3,751 3,925 174 961 977 990 998 1,011 13 17 18 Education related ............................................................................ 39,040 42,400 3,360 10,274 10,491 10,708 10,927 11,089 162 18 19 Other personal travel ........................................................................ 123,115 124,753 1,638 30,836 30,993 31,376 31,548 31,783 235 19 20 Insurance services ............................................................................... 17,067 18,047 980 4,192 4,392 4,708 4,755 4,862 107 20 21 Direct insurance ............................................................................... 2,060 1,957 -103 463 467 491 536 551 15 21 22 Reinsurance .................................................................................... 13,585 14,508 923 3,340 3,535 3,818 3,815 3,900 85 22 23 Auxiliary insurance services ................................................................... 1,422 1,582 160 389 390 399 403 411 8 23 24 Financial services ............................................................................... 99,384 109,642 10,258 26,111 26,854 27,927 28,751 29,443 692 24 25 Securities brokerage, underwriting, and related services ....................................... 11,717 12,176 459 3,111 3,295 2,837 2,934 3,012 78 25 26 Financial management, financial advisory, and custody services ................................. 49,026 53,625 4,599 12,649 12,793 13,821 14,363 14,687 324 26 27 Credit card and other credit-related services .................................................. 20,651 23,158 2,507 5,504 5,717 5,955 5,982 6,130 148 27 28 Securities lending, electronic funds transfer, and other services .............................. 17,990 20,682 2,692 4,847 5,049 5,314 5,472 5,614 142 28 29 Charges for the use of intellectual property n.i.e. .............................................. 124,734 128,364 3,630 31,115 32,214 32,273 32,762 33,359 597 29 30 Industrial processes ........................................................................... 47,285 46,988 -297 11,152 11,699 11,833 12,303 12,412 109 30 31 Computer software .............................................................................. 36,708 37,081 373 9,383 9,338 9,229 9,130 9,160 30 31 32 Trademarks and franchise fees .................................................................. 20,439 22,646 2,207 5,091 5,541 5,847 6,168 6,501 333 32 33 Audio-visual and related products .............................................................. 20,227 21,586 1,359 5,477 5,619 5,348 5,142 5,267 125 33 34 Other intellectual property .................................................................... 75 63 -12 12 17 17 18 19 1 34 35 Telecommunications, computer, and information services ........................................... 38,548 42,219 3,671 10,241 10,341 10,735 10,902 11,184 282 35 36 Telecommunications services .................................................................... 11,736 10,879 -857 2,777 2,751 2,716 2,635 2,588 -47 36 37 Computer services .............................................................................. 19,626 22,941 3,315 5,468 5,479 5,933 6,061 6,285 224 37 38 Information services ........................................................................... 7,186 8,399 1,213 1,996 2,111 2,086 2,206 2,311 105 38 39 Other business services .......................................................................... 143,768 154,313 10,545 38,165 37,886 38,936 39,326 40,144 818 39 40 Research and development services .............................................................. 38,159 42,191 4,032 9,987 10,507 10,762 10,934 11,124 190 40 41 Professional and management consulting services ................................................ 75,032 78,850 3,818 19,736 19,104 19,822 20,188 20,605 417 41 42 Technical, trade-related, and other business services /2/ ...................................... 30,577 33,272 2,695 8,441 8,274 8,352 8,205 8,415 210 42 43 Government goods and services n.i.e. ............................................................. 18,801 19,329 528 4,831 4,844 5,037 4,617 4,748 131 43 44 Imports of services (table 1, line 42) ............................................................. 509,838 542,471 32,633 131,781 134,004 137,261 139,426 142,936 3,510 44 45 Maintenance and repair services n.i.e. ........................................................... 8,731 8,337 -394 2,138 2,136 2,004 2,059 2,016 -43 45 46 Transport ........................................................................................ 96,939 101,744 4,805 25,200 25,319 25,352 25,872 26,284 412 46 47 Sea transport .................................................................................. 35,097 37,058 1,961 9,351 9,126 9,190 9,391 9,669 278 47 48 Freight ...................................................................................... 32,709 34,387 1,678 8,710 8,466 8,506 8,705 8,978 273 48 49 Port ......................................................................................... 2,388 2,670 282 641 659 684 685 691 6 49 50 Air transport .................................................................................. 58,043 60,825 2,782 14,892 15,175 15,213 15,545 15,665 120 50 51 Passenger .................................................................................... 37,367 38,897 1,530 9,552 9,708 9,722 9,914 10,164 250 51 52 Freight ...................................................................................... 6,951 7,869 918 1,838 1,960 1,991 2,080 1,989 -91 52 53 Port ......................................................................................... 13,724 14,060 336 3,502 3,507 3,499 3,551 3,512 -39 53 54 Other modes of transport ....................................................................... 3,799 3,861 62 957 1,018 949 937 950 13 54 55 Travel (for all purposes including education) /1/ ................................................ 123,569 135,024 11,455 32,779 33,525 33,813 34,906 35,615 709 55 56 Business ....................................................................................... 15,919 16,576 657 4,069 4,220 4,147 4,140 4,189 49 56 57 Expenditures by border, seasonal, and other short-term workers ............................... 1,373 1,421 48 350 354 358 359 364 5 57 58 Other business travel ........................................................................ 14,546 15,155 609 3,718 3,866 3,789 3,782 3,825 43 58 59 Personal ....................................................................................... 107,651 118,448 10,797 28,710 29,306 29,666 30,766 31,426 660 59 60 Health related ............................................................................... 2,057 2,316 259 554 570 587 605 623 18 60 61 Education related ............................................................................ 7,639 8,220 581 2,013 2,040 2,070 2,097 2,143 46 61 62 Other personal travel ........................................................................ 97,954 107,912 9,958 26,143 26,696 27,008 28,065 28,660 595 62 63 Insurance services ............................................................................... 49,900 50,665 765 12,318 12,820 13,094 12,434 12,095 -339 63 64 Direct insurance ............................................................................... 3,980 3,766 -214 845 989 935 997 977 -20 64 65 Reinsurance .................................................................................... 43,889 45,112 1,223 10,988 11,387 11,723 11,013 10,712 -301 65 66 Auxiliary insurance services ................................................................... 2,031 1,787 -244 484 444 436 423 406 -17 66 67 Financial services ............................................................................... 25,752 28,931 3,179 6,750 7,076 7,478 7,628 7,965 337 67 68 Securities brokerage, underwriting, and related services ....................................... 4,245 4,827 582 1,157 1,330 1,193 1,147 1,313 166 68 69 Financial management, financial advisory, and custody services ................................. 10,955 12,125 1,170 2,858 2,874 3,125 3,268 3,366 98 69 70 Credit card and other credit-related services .................................................. 7,186 8,158 972 1,842 1,953 2,148 2,215 2,263 48 70 71 Securities lending, electronic funds transfer, and other services .............................. 3,366 3,820 454 892 919 1,012 997 1,023 26 71 72 Charges for the use of intellectual property n.i.e. .............................................. 46,577 51,284 4,707 12,042 12,298 13,136 13,808 15,318 1,510 72 73 Industrial processes ........................................................................... 23,020 24,073 1,053 5,682 5,606 6,222 6,564 6,725 161 73 74 Computer software .............................................................................. 7,593 9,957 2,364 2,209 2,475 2,447 2,827 3,112 285 74 75 Trademarks and franchise fees .................................................................. 3,572 3,889 317 904 1,024 962 999 1,028 29 75 76 Audio-visual and related products .............................................................. 12,281 13,226 945 3,197 3,166 3,471 3,392 4,426 1,034 76 77 Other intellectual property .................................................................... 110 138 28 50 27 35 27 27 0 77 78 Telecommunications, computer, and information services ........................................... 37,391 40,054 2,663 9,900 9,805 10,068 10,280 10,465 185 78 79 Telecommunications services .................................................................... 5,490 5,478 -12 1,337 1,322 1,414 1,406 1,411 5 79 80 Computer services .............................................................................. 29,531 31,956 2,425 7,895 7,852 7,998 8,211 8,373 162 80 81 Information services ........................................................................... 2,370 2,619 249 669 631 656 663 681 18 81 82 Other business services .......................................................................... 99,476 104,385 4,909 25,133 25,549 26,774 26,929 27,607 678 82 83 Research and development services .............................................................. 34,133 35,344 1,211 8,639 8,734 9,004 8,967 9,164 197 83 84 Professional and management consulting services ................................................ 41,247 43,361 2,114 10,345 10,684 11,123 11,209 11,450 241 84 85 Technical, trade-related, and other business services /2/ ...................................... 24,095 25,681 1,586 6,149 6,131 6,647 6,753 6,992 239 85 86 Government goods and services n.i.e. ............................................................. 21,503 22,047 544 5,520 5,477 5,541 5,510 5,572 62 86 87 Balance on services (line 1 less line 44) .......................................................... 249,050 255,219 6,169 63,387 63,248 64,032 64,551 64,892 341 87 Supplemental detail on insurance transactions: 88 Premiums received .................................................................................. 31,876 31,921 45 7,537 7,869 8,347 8,169 8,231 62 88 89 Losses paid ........................................................................................ 16,196 18,303 2,107 3,749 4,034 6,890 3,630 3,567 -63 89 90 Premiums paid ...................................................................................... 122,114 129,879 7,765 31,616 32,890 33,943 31,429 31,054 -375 90 91 Losses recovered ................................................................................... 79,654 111,444 31,790 21,365 21,880 46,595 21,603 21,796 193 91 p Preliminary r Revised 1. All travel purposes include 1) business travel, including expenditures by border, seasonal, and other short-term workers and 2) personal travel, including health-related and education-related travel. 2. Includes construction, architectural and engineering services, waste treatment, operational leasing, trade-related, and other business services. Notes: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. See international transactions accounts tables 3.2 and 3.3 at www.bea.gov/iTable/index_ita.cfm for geographic detail. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 4. U.S. International Transactions in Primary Income [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I 1 Primary income receipts (table 1, line 23) ........................................................ 830,174 928,118 97,944 217,567 223,979 237,632 248,940 258,786 9,846 1 2 Investment income ............................................................................... 823,709 921,816 98,107 215,984 222,406 236,058 247,367 257,193 9,826 2 3 Direct investment income ...................................................................... 456,426 504,404 47,978 120,189 120,486 127,799 135,929 137,995 2,066 3 4 Income on equity ............................................................................ 432,160 477,707 45,547 114,081 114,403 120,340 128,884 130,620 1,736 4 5 Dividends and withdrawals ................................................................. 139,250 155,081 15,831 38,215 34,881 55,110 26,874 305,641 278,767 5 6 Reinvested earnings ....................................................................... 292,910 322,626 29,716 75,867 79,521 65,229 102,009 -175,022 -277,031 6 7 Interest .................................................................................... 24,266 26,697 2,431 6,108 6,083 7,459 7,046 7,375 329 7 8 U.S. parents' receipts .................................................................... 17,987 18,101 114 4,667 4,558 4,532 4,344 4,561 217 8 9 U.S. affiliates' receipts ................................................................. 6,279 8,596 2,317 1,441 1,525 2,927 2,702 2,814 112 9 10 Portfolio investment income ................................................................... 326,325 354,406 28,081 83,011 86,627 91,154 93,614 98,978 5,364 10 11 Income on equity and investment fund shares ................................................. 217,962 236,246 18,284 54,872 57,597 61,241 62,535 65,997 3,462 11 12 Dividends on equity other than investment fund shares ..................................... 190,669 208,956 18,287 48,202 50,894 54,311 55,548 58,606 3,058 12 13 Income attributable to investment fund shareholders ....................................... 27,293 27,290 -3 6,670 6,703 6,930 6,987 7,391 404 13 14 Interest on debt securities ................................................................. 108,363 118,161 9,798 28,139 29,031 29,913 31,078 32,981 1,903 14 15 Short term ................................................................................ 2,287 5,372 3,085 872 1,186 1,525 1,789 2,339 550 15 16 Long term ................................................................................. 106,077 112,789 6,712 27,267 27,845 28,388 29,289 30,642 1,353 16 17 Other investment income ....................................................................... 40,850 62,620 21,770 12,725 15,158 16,996 17,741 20,051 2,310 17 18 Interest /1/ ................................................................................ 29,394 51,243 21,849 9,887 12,293 14,138 14,925 17,411 2,486 18 19 Income attributable to insurance policyholders .............................................. 11,457 11,378 -79 2,838 2,865 2,858 2,817 2,640 -177 19 20 Reserve asset income .......................................................................... 108 385 277 59 135 109 82 169 87 20 21 Interest .................................................................................... 108 385 277 59 135 109 82 169 87 21 22 Compensation of employees ....................................................................... 6,466 6,302 -164 1,582 1,573 1,573 1,573 1,593 20 22 23 Primary income payments (table 1, line 52) ........................................................ 637,151 706,386 69,235 164,962 175,444 179,410 186,569 196,775 10,206 23 24 Investment income ............................................................................... 618,013 686,699 68,686 160,123 170,545 174,430 181,601 191,803 10,202 24 25 Direct investment income ...................................................................... 183,812 205,976 22,164 46,358 52,298 51,342 55,978 58,914 2,936 25 26 Income on equity ............................................................................ 138,168 153,480 15,312 33,613 39,392 38,190 42,285 44,370 2,085 26 27 Dividends and withdrawals ................................................................. 46,523 45,621 -902 7,928 15,177 8,063 14,454 8,141 -6,313 27 28 Reinvested earnings ....................................................................... 91,644 107,859 16,215 25,685 24,215 30,127 27,832 36,229 8,397 28 29 Interest .................................................................................... 45,644 52,496 6,852 12,746 12,906 13,151 13,693 14,544 851 29 30 U.S. affiliates' payments ................................................................. 38,337 43,712 5,375 10,661 10,768 10,923 11,360 12,277 917 30 31 U.S. parents' payments .................................................................... 7,307 8,784 1,477 2,085 2,139 2,228 2,332 2,267 -65 31 32 Portfolio investment income ................................................................... 407,603 432,510 24,907 104,489 106,870 109,845 111,305 115,353 4,048 32 33 Income on equity and investment fund shares ................................................. 138,514 144,632 6,118 35,305 36,032 36,670 36,625 38,841 2,216 33 34 Dividends on equity other than investment fund shares ..................................... 107,769 112,430 4,661 27,535 27,681 28,553 28,660 30,518 1,858 34 35 Income attributable to investment fund shareholders ....................................... 30,744 32,202 1,458 7,770 8,351 8,117 7,965 8,323 358 35 36 Interest on debt securities ................................................................. 269,089 287,878 18,789 69,184 70,838 73,175 74,680 76,512 1,832 36 37 Short term ................................................................................ 3,707 8,247 4,540 1,418 1,871 2,255 2,703 3,658 955 37 38 Long term ................................................................................. 265,382 279,630 14,248 67,766 68,967 70,920 71,978 72,854 876 38 39 Other investment income ....................................................................... 26,599 48,213 21,614 9,276 11,377 13,243 14,317 17,536 3,219 39 40 Interest /1/ ................................................................................ 23,710 45,497 21,787 8,600 10,702 12,565 13,630 16,861 3,231 40 41 Income attributable to insurance policyholders .............................................. 2,889 2,716 -173 676 675 679 687 675 -12 41 42 Compensation of employees ....................................................................... 19,139 19,687 548 4,839 4,899 4,980 4,969 4,972 3 42 43 Balance on primary income (line 1 less line 23) ................................................... 193,023 221,731 28,708 52,604 48,535 58,222 62,371 62,012 -359 43 p Preliminary r Revised 1. Primarily interest on loans and deposits. Notes: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. See international transactions accounts tables 4.2-4.4 at www.bea.gov/iTable/index_ita.cfm for additional account detail. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 5. U.S. International Transactions in Secondary Income [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I 1 Secondary income (current transfer) receipts (table 1, line 30) ................................... 137,764 154,049 16,285 40,696 35,557 42,258 35,537 35,329 -208 1 2 U.S. government transfers /1/ ................................................................. 28,391 39,983 11,592 12,315 7,418 12,975 7,274 7,164 -110 2 3 Private transfers /2/ ......................................................................... 109,373 114,066 4,693 28,381 28,139 29,283 28,263 28,164 -99 3 4 Secondary income (current transfer) payments (table 1, line 58) ................................... 261,659 272,645 10,986 66,051 69,229 71,136 66,229 65,819 -410 4 5 U.S. government transfers ..................................................................... 55,409 51,598 -3,811 13,477 12,747 12,365 13,010 11,613 -1,397 5 6 U.S. government grants /3/ ................................................................ 43,104 41,967 -1,137 11,097 10,341 9,949 10,581 8,967 -1,614 6 7 U.S. government pensions and other transfers /4/ .......................................... 12,305 9,631 -2,674 2,380 2,407 2,415 2,429 2,646 217 7 8 Private transfers ............................................................................. 206,250 221,047 14,797 52,574 56,482 58,771 53,220 54,206 986 8 9 Personal transfers /5/ .................................................................... 45,971 48,277 2,306 11,829 11,988 12,149 12,311 12,476 165 9 10 Other current transfers /6/ ............................................................... 160,279 172,769 12,490 40,745 44,494 46,623 40,908 41,729 821 10 11 Balance on secondary income (line 1 less line 4) .................................................. -123,895 -118,597 5,298 -25,355 -33,672 -28,878 -30,692 -30,491 201 11 p Preliminary r Revised 1. Primarily withholding taxes received and fines levied by U.S. government agencies. 2. Primarily insurance-related transfers; pensions and benefits received from Canada, Germany, and the United Kingdom; antitrust-related class-action lawsuits; and personal transfers received by U.S. residents. 3. Nonmilitary and military assistance provided to foreigners in the form of goods, services, or cash under programs enacted by the U.S. Congress. 4. Primarily U.S. government social security and retirement benefits paid to former U.S. residents who reside abroad and contributions to international organizations and commissions to meet the financial obligations of membership and to fund United Nations peacekeeping operations. 5. Personal transfers (sometimes called remittances) from U.S. resident immigrants to foreign residents. 6. Primarily insurance-related transfers; withholding taxes paid by U.S. companies; and charitable donations by U.S. entities. Note: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 6. U.S. International Financial Transactions for Direct Investment [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I   Acquisition of assets / transactions for outward investment 1 Net U.S. acquisition of direct investment assets, asset/liability basis (table 1, line 62) /1/ ..... 312,975 379,222 66,247 135,054 49,976 102,936 91,256 -119,662 -210,918 1 2 Equity ........................................................................................... 336,657 352,504 15,847 89,319 92,569 69,079 101,537 -170,162 -271,699 2 3 Equity other than reinvestment of earnings ..................................................... 43,747 29,878 -13,869 13,452 13,047 3,850 -472 4,859 5,331 3 4 Reinvestment of earnings ....................................................................... 292,910 322,626 29,716 75,867 79,521 65,229 102,009 -175,022 -277,031 4 5 Debt instruments ................................................................................. -23,683 26,718 50,401 45,735 -42,593 33,857 -10,281 50,500 60,781 5 6 U.S. parents' claims ........................................................................... -3,757 3,753 7,510 51,008 -45,255 12,580 -14,580 46,690 61,270 6 7 U.S. affiliates' claims ........................................................................ -19,925 22,965 42,890 -5,273 2,662 21,277 4,298 3,809 -489 7 8 Less: Adjustments to convert to directional basis .................................................. 8,416 62,753 54,337 17,386 10,685 41,387 -6,705 39,821 46,526 8 9 U.S. parents' liabilities ........................................................................ 28,341 39,788 11,447 22,659 8,023 20,109 -11,004 36,012 47,016 9 10 U.S. affiliates' claims .......................................................................... -19,925 22,965 42,890 -5,273 2,662 21,277 4,298 3,809 -489 10 11 Equals: Financial transactions for outward direct investment (U.S. direct investment abroad), directional basis /2/ ..................................................................... 304,558 316,469 11,911 117,667 39,291 61,550 97,962 -159,484 -257,446 11 12 Equity ........................................................................................... 336,657 352,504 15,847 89,319 92,569 69,079 101,537 -170,162 -271,699 12 13 Equity other than reinvestment of earnings (line 14 less line 15) .............................. 43,747 29,878 -13,869 13,452 13,047 3,850 -472 4,859 5,331 13 14 Increases .................................................................................... 99,590 85,665 -13,925 19,181 26,540 21,937 18,007 11,990 -6,017 14 15 Decreases .................................................................................... 55,843 55,787 -56 5,729 13,492 18,087 18,479 7,130 -11,349 15 16 Reinvestment of earnings ....................................................................... 292,910 322,626 29,716 75,867 79,521 65,229 102,009 -175,022 -277,031 16 17 Reinvestment of earnings without current-cost adjustment ..................................... 277,612 306,535 28,923 71,913 75,509 61,177 97,937 -178,960 -276,897 17 18 Current-cost adjustment ...................................................................... 15,297 16,091 794 3,954 4,013 4,053 4,072 3,938 -134 18 19 Debt instruments (line 20 less line 21) .......................................................... -32,099 -36,035 -3,936 28,348 -53,278 -7,529 -3,576 10,678 14,254 19 20 U.S. parents' claims ........................................................................... -3,757 3,753 7,510 51,008 -45,255 12,580 -14,580 46,690 61,270 20 21 U.S. parents' liabilities ...................................................................... 28,341 39,788 11,447 22,659 8,023 20,109 -11,004 36,012 47,016 21 22 Financial transactions without current-cost adjustment for outward direct investment, directional basis (line 11 less line 18) /2/ ....................................................... 289,261 300,378 11,117 113,714 35,278 57,497 93,889 -163,422 -257,311 22 23 Manufacturing .................................................................................. 52,609 77,073 24,464 17,686 19,458 21,893 18,035 17,191 -844 23 24 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ 16,629 11,628 -5,001 2,057 3,208 3,091 3,272 -1,183 -4,455 24 25 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... 16,208 42,096 25,888 1,960 19,888 5,727 14,521 -5,643 -20,164 25 26 Holding companies except bank holding companies ................................................ 146,599 125,603 -20,996 50,799 35 26,563 48,205 -189,059 -237,264 26 27 Other .......................................................................................... 57,216 43,977 -13,239 41,211 -7,312 223 9,856 15,272 5,416 27 28 Equity other than reinvestment of earnings ....................................................... 43,747 29,878 -13,869 13,452 13,047 3,850 -472 4,859 5,331 28 29 Manufacturing .................................................................................. 8,185 6,963 -1,222 -35 3,701 590 2,707 1,210 -1,497 29 30 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ 21 413 392 (D) -77 (D) 183 -23 -206 30 31 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... 21,056 4,953 -16,103 -260 6,583 680 -2,050 2,149 4,199 31 32 Holding companies except bank holding companies ................................................ 8,563 6,647 -1,916 6,857 -1,977 3,323 -1,556 770 2,326 32 33 Other .......................................................................................... 5,922 10,902 4,980 (D) 4,817 (D) 244 754 510 33 34 Reinvestment of earnings without current-cost adjustment ......................................... 277,612 306,535 28,923 71,913 75,509 61,177 97,937 -178,960 -276,897 34 35 Manufacturing .................................................................................. 44,858 63,891 19,033 15,654 14,308 17,199 16,729 14,997 -1,732 35 36 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ 15,249 15,545 296 (D) 3,794 (D) 3,963 3,397 -566 36 37 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... 20,283 35,170 14,887 6,400 10,102 7,364 11,305 -18,510 -29,815 37 38 Holding companies except bank holding companies ................................................ 154,060 136,729 -17,331 33,820 36,523 18,268 48,119 -191,437 -239,556 38 39 Other .......................................................................................... 43,162 55,199 12,037 (D) 10,781 (D) 17,821 12,593 -5,228 39 40 Debt instruments ................................................................................. -32,099 -36,035 -3,936 28,348 -53,278 -7,529 -3,576 10,678 14,254 40 41 Manufacturing .................................................................................. -435 6,218 6,653 2,067 1,449 4,104 -1,401 985 2,386 41 42 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ 1,360 -4,330 -5,690 -2,235 -509 -711 -875 -4,557 -3,682 42 43 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... -25,132 1,973 27,105 -4,180 3,203 -2,317 5,267 10,719 5,452 43 44 Holding companies except bank holding companies ................................................ -16,024 -17,773 -1,749 10,122 -34,510 4,972 1,643 1,608 -35 44 45 Other .......................................................................................... 8,132 -22,124 -30,256 22,573 -22,911 -13,577 -8,209 1,924 10,133 45 Incurrence of liabilities / transactions for inward investment 46 Net U.S. incurrence of direct investment liabilities, asset/liability basis (table 1, line 85) /1/.. 494,455 354,829 -139,626 112,354 97,118 107,107 38,250 97,344 59,094 46 47 Equity ........................................................................................... 387,599 308,406 -79,193 94,137 77,022 72,927 64,320 62,395 -1,925 47 48 Equity other than reinvestment of earnings ..................................................... 295,955 200,547 -95,408 68,452 52,806 42,799 36,488 26,165 -10,323 48 49 Reinvestment of earnings ....................................................................... 91,644 107,859 16,215 25,685 24,215 30,127 27,832 36,229 8,397 49 50 Debt instruments ................................................................................. 106,856 46,423 -60,433 18,217 20,097 34,180 -26,070 34,949 61,019 50 51 U.S. affiliates' liabilities ................................................................... 78,515 6,635 -71,880 -4,443 12,074 14,071 -15,066 -1,063 14,003 51 52 U.S. parents' liabilities ...................................................................... 28,341 39,788 11,447 22,659 8,023 20,109 -11,004 36,012 47,016 52 53 Less: Adjustments to convert to directional basis .................................................. 8,416 62,753 54,337 17,386 10,685 41,387 -6,705 39,821 46,526 53 54 U.S. parents' liabilities ........................................................................ 28,341 39,788 11,447 22,659 8,023 20,109 -11,004 36,012 47,016 54 55 U.S. affiliates' claims .......................................................................... -19,925 22,965 42,890 -5,273 2,662 21,277 4,298 3,809 -489 55 56 Equals: Financial transactions for inward direct investment (foreign direct investment in the United States), directional basis /2/ .......................................................... 486,039 292,076 -193,963 94,967 86,433 65,720 44,955 57,523 12,568 56 57 Equity ........................................................................................... 387,599 308,406 -79,193 94,137 77,022 72,927 64,320 62,395 -1,925 57 58 Equity other than reinvestment of earnings (line 59 less line 60) .............................. 295,955 200,547 -95,408 68,452 52,806 42,799 36,488 26,165 -10,323 58 59 Increases .................................................................................... 317,795 218,159 -99,636 72,713 58,121 48,020 39,305 30,835 -8,470 59 60 Decreases .................................................................................... 21,840 17,612 -4,228 4,261 5,314 5,221 2,817 4,670 1,853 60 61 Reinvestment of earnings ....................................................................... 91,644 107,859 16,215 25,685 24,215 30,127 27,832 36,229 8,397 61 62 Reinvestment of earnings without current-cost adjustment ..................................... 77,397 93,040 15,643 22,046 20,520 26,394 24,080 31,716 7,636 62 63 Current-cost adjustment ...................................................................... 14,247 14,819 572 3,639 3,695 3,733 3,752 4,514 762 63 64 Debt instruments (line 65 less line 66) .......................................................... 98,440 -16,329 -114,769 830 9,412 -7,207 -19,365 -4,872 14,493 64 65 U.S. affiliates' liabilities ................................................................... 78,515 6,635 -71,880 -4,443 12,074 14,071 -15,066 -1,063 14,003 65 66 U.S. affiliates' claims ........................................................................ -19,925 22,965 42,890 -5,273 2,662 21,277 4,298 3,809 -489 66 67 Financial transactions without current-cost adjustment for inward direct investment, directional basis (line 56 less line 63) /2/ ....................................................... 471,792 277,258 -194,534 91,328 82,738 61,987 41,204 53,009 11,805 67 68 Manufacturing .................................................................................. 204,441 95,575 -108,866 16,621 47,727 17,797 13,429 22,597 9,168 68 69 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ 12,384 59,196 46,812 45,085 4,420 6,308 3,383 4,441 1,058 69 70 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... 74,742 40,360 -34,382 14,785 18,934 4,685 1,956 11,990 10,034 70 71 Other .......................................................................................... 180,225 82,127 -98,098 14,838 11,657 33,197 22,435 13,980 -8,455 71 72 Equity other than reinvestment of earnings ....................................................... 295,955 200,547 -95,408 68,452 52,806 42,799 36,488 26,165 -10,323 72 73 Manufacturing .................................................................................. 111,998 55,151 -56,847 5,480 34,434 13,098 2,139 16,456 14,317 73 74 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ 14,026 51,148 37,122 39,367 1,923 841 9,018 236 -8,782 74 75 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... 40,611 36,975 -3,636 14,726 9,808 3,940 8,500 1,353 -7,147 75 76 Other .......................................................................................... 129,321 57,272 -72,049 8,879 6,642 24,920 16,832 8,120 -8,712 76 77 Reinvestment of earnings without current-cost adjustment ......................................... 77,397 93,040 15,643 22,046 20,520 26,394 24,080 31,716 7,636 77 78 Manufacturing .................................................................................. 44,531 60,324 15,793 14,065 13,630 15,896 16,733 15,909 -824 78 79 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ -4,121 3,035 7,156 2,924 1,363 -406 -846 2,821 3,667 79 80 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... 21,633 13,694 -7,939 841 6,274 4,852 1,727 5,535 3,808 80 81 Other .......................................................................................... 15,353 15,987 634 4,216 -746 6,051 6,466 7,452 986 81 82 Debt instruments ................................................................................. 98,440 -16,329 -114,769 830 9,412 -7,207 -19,365 -4,872 14,493 82 83 Manufacturing .................................................................................. 47,911 -19,900 -67,811 -2,924 -337 -11,197 -5,442 -9,767 -4,325 83 84 Wholesale trade ................................................................................ 2,479 5,012 2,533 2,794 1,134 5,872 -4,789 1,384 6,173 84 85 Finance (including depository institutions) and insurance ...................................... 12,498 -10,309 -22,807 -782 2,853 -4,108 -8,271 5,102 13,373 85 86 Other .......................................................................................... 35,551 8,867 -26,684 1,743 5,762 2,226 -862 -1,591 -729 86 p Preliminary r Revised (D) Suppressed to avoid disclosure of individual companies. 1. Financial transactions on an asset/liability basis are organized according to whether the transactions relate to an asset or a liability. Net U.S. acquisition of direct investment assets relates to U.S. parent and U.S. affiliate acquisition of claims (assets). Net U.S. incurrence of direct investment liabilities relates to U.S. affiliate and U.S. parent incurrence of liabilities. 2. Financial transactions on a directional basis are organized according to whether the transactions relate to outward investment (U.S. direct investment abroad) or inward investment (foreign direct investment in the United States). Transactions for outward investment relate to transactions for U.S. parent claims and liabilities. Transactions for inward investment relate to transactions for U.S. affiliate liabilities and claims. Note: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 7. U.S. International Financial Transactions for Portfolio Investment [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Not seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I Assets and liabilities by instrument 1 Net U.S. acquisition of portfolio investment assets (table 1, line 65) ............................. 36,283 586,695 550,412 141,783 180,700 175,910 88,301 365,467 277,166 1 By type of foreign security: 2 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. 21,743 166,827 145,084 32,119 110,542 63,399 -39,233 242,518 281,751 2 3 Equity other than investment fund shares ..................................................... 18,871 147,259 128,388 28,213 97,675 56,222 -34,851 215,356 250,207 3 4 Investment fund shares ....................................................................... 2,871 19,567 16,696 3,906 12,867 7,177 -4,382 27,162 31,544 4 5 Debt securities ................................................................................ 14,541 419,868 405,327 109,664 70,158 112,512 127,534 122,949 -4,585 5 6 Short term ................................................................................... -27,409 193,855 221,264 40,439 38,799 74,149 40,467 21,945 -18,522 6 7 Negotiable certificates of deposit ......................................................... 8,122 43,034 34,912 11,912 15,534 11,742 3,847 -5,403 -9,250 7 8 Commercial paper ........................................................................... -59,187 91,943 151,130 33,903 8,614 56,270 -6,845 23,571 30,416 8 9 Other short-term securities ................................................................ 23,656 58,878 35,222 -5,376 14,652 6,137 43,464 3,777 -39,687 9 10 Long term .................................................................................... 41,950 226,013 184,063 69,225 31,359 38,363 87,067 101,004 13,937 10 11 Government securities ...................................................................... 11,125 63,645 52,520 19,348 8,849 10,807 24,640 29,119 4,479 11 12 Corporate bonds and notes .................................................................. 30,178 160,175 129,997 49,269 21,717 26,957 62,231 72,160 9,929 12 13 Negotiable certificates of deposit ......................................................... 647 2,194 1,547 607 792 599 196 -276 -472 13 14 Net U.S. incurrence of portfolio investment liabilities (table 1, line 88) ......................... 231,349 799,182 567,833 160,111 263,170 294,275 81,626 292,084 210,458 14 By type of U.S. security acquired by foreign residents: 15 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. -139,700 155,680 295,380 57,471 21,024 80,561 -3,377 150,345 153,722 15 16 Equity other than investment fund shares ..................................................... -109,065 121,063 230,128 44,822 16,150 62,733 -2,642 118,126 120,768 16 17 Investment fund shares ....................................................................... -30,635 34,616 65,251 12,649 4,873 17,828 -734 32,219 32,953 17 18 Debt securities ................................................................................ 371,049 643,503 272,454 102,640 242,147 213,713 85,003 141,739 56,736 18 19 Short term ................................................................................... -12,092 15,851 27,943 -4,593 15,264 -20,035 25,215 31,354 6,139 19 20 Treasury bills and certificates ............................................................ -55,864 33,539 89,403 317 3,820 9,132 20,270 13,560 -6,710 20 21 Federally sponsored agency securities ...................................................... -18,157 -6,335 11,822 -1,977 -4,592 -1,927 2,160 2,214 54 21 22 Negotiable certificates of deposit ......................................................... 24,950 -5,581 -30,531 3,730 11,369 -12,420 -8,260 753 9,013 22 23 Commercial paper and other securities ...................................................... 36,979 -5,772 -42,751 -6,664 4,667 -14,820 11,044 14,827 3,783 23 24 Long term .................................................................................... 383,141 627,652 244,511 107,233 226,882 233,748 59,788 110,385 50,597 24 25 Treasury bonds and notes ................................................................... -51,992 273,308 325,300 71,573 51,155 150,035 546 76,491 75,945 25 26 State and local government securities ...................................................... 7,230 7,058 -172 1,136 3,162 1,574 1,186 111 -1,075 26 27 Federally sponsored agency securities ...................................................... 97,207 27,376 -69,831 -16,906 21,605 14,153 8,523 28,912 20,389 27 28 Corporate bonds and notes .................................................................. 326,252 320,949 -5,303 50,750 148,860 70,281 51,058 4,731 -46,327 28 29 Negotiable certificates of deposit ......................................................... 4,444 -1,039 -5,483 681 2,100 -2,294 -1,526 139 1,665 29 Assets by sector of U.S. holder 30 Net U.S. acquisition of portfolio investment assets (line 1) ....................................... 36,283 586,695 550,412 141,783 180,700 175,910 88,301 365,467 277,166 30 31 Deposit-taking institutions except central bank .................................................. 4,730 34,752 30,022 7,130 7,455 7,701 12,467 12,057 -410 31 32 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. 402 2,386 1,984 482 1,658 964 -718 4,220 4,938 32 33 Debt securities ................................................................................ 4,328 32,367 28,039 6,648 5,797 6,737 13,185 7,837 -5,348 33 34 Short term ................................................................................... 555 12,350 11,795 318 2,666 3,170 6,195 476 -5,719 34 35 Long term .................................................................................... 3,773 20,017 16,244 6,330 3,130 3,567 6,989 7,361 372 35 36 Other financial institutions ..................................................................... 23,954 504,845 480,891 123,680 156,129 155,866 69,170 313,299 244,129 36 37 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. 18,551 143,997 125,446 27,648 95,409 54,650 -33,709 208,978 242,687 37 38 Debt securities ................................................................................ 5,403 360,848 355,445 96,032 60,720 101,217 102,878 104,321 1,443 38 39 Short term ................................................................................... -28,843 180,282 209,125 40,864 35,922 70,741 32,756 22,700 -10,056 39 40 Long term .................................................................................... 34,246 180,565 146,319 55,169 24,799 30,475 70,122 81,621 11,499 40 41 Nonfinancial institutions except general government .............................................. 7,599 47,098 39,499 10,973 17,116 12,343 6,665 40,112 33,447 41 42 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. 2,789 20,444 17,655 3,989 13,475 7,785 -4,806 29,320 34,126 42 43 Debt securities ................................................................................ 4,810 26,654 21,844 6,984 3,641 4,558 11,471 10,791 -680 43 44 Short term ................................................................................... 879 1,222 343 -743 212 238 1,516 -1,231 -2,747 44 45 Long term .................................................................................... 3,931 25,432 21,501 7,726 3,430 4,320 9,955 12,022 2,067 45 Liabilities by sector of U.S. issuer 46 Net U.S. incurrence of portfolio investment liabilities (line 14) .................................. 231,349 799,182 567,833 160,111 263,170 294,275 81,626 292,084 210,458 46 47 Deposit-taking institutions except central bank .................................................. 57,074 27,417 -29,657 12,743 26,962 -3,528 -8,761 5,790 14,551 47 48 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. -6,374 5,975 12,349 2,322 782 2,997 -126 6,104 6,230 48 49 Debt securities ................................................................................ 63,448 21,442 -42,006 10,421 26,180 -6,525 -8,635 -314 8,321 49 50 Short term ................................................................................... 28,275 -2,171 -30,446 5,630 12,841 -9,642 -11,000 -819 10,181 50 51 Long term .................................................................................... 35,172 23,613 -11,559 4,791 13,339 3,118 2,365 505 -1,860 51 52 Other financial institutions ..................................................................... 181,676 178,903 -2,773 12,075 80,130 51,170 35,527 87,459 51,932 52 53 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. -40,269 48,378 88,647 17,845 6,692 24,877 -1,036 45,600 46,636 53 54 Debt securities ................................................................................ 221,945 130,525 -91,420 -5,769 73,438 26,293 36,563 41,859 5,296 54 55 Federally sponsored agency securities ........................................................ 79,050 21,041 -58,009 -18,883 17,013 12,226 10,683 31,126 20,443 55 56 Short term ................................................................................. -18,157 -6,335 11,822 -1,977 -4,592 -1,927 2,160 2,214 54 56 57 Long term .................................................................................. 97,207 27,376 -69,831 -16,906 21,605 14,153 8,523 28,912 20,389 57 58 Other securities ............................................................................. 142,896 109,484 -33,412 13,113 56,425 14,067 25,879 10,733 -15,146 58 59 Short term ................................................................................. 26,454 -4,207 -30,661 -5,065 3,163 -10,461 8,157 9,137 980 59 60 Long term .................................................................................. 116,441 113,691 -2,750 18,179 53,262 24,528 17,722 1,595 -16,127 60 61 Nonfinancial institutions except general government .............................................. 93,224 278,958 185,734 62,267 97,941 85,892 32,858 108,673 75,815 61 62 Equity and investment fund shares .............................................................. -93,058 101,327 194,385 37,304 13,550 52,687 -2,214 98,641 100,855 62 63 Debt securities ................................................................................ 186,282 177,631 -8,651 24,962 84,391 33,204 35,073 10,031 -25,042 63 64 Short term ................................................................................... 7,200 -4,975 -12,175 -3,498 32 -7,137 5,628 7,262 1,634 64 65 Long term .................................................................................... 179,082 182,606 3,524 28,461 84,359 40,341 29,445 2,770 -26,675 65 66 General government ............................................................................... -100,626 313,905 414,531 73,026 58,137 160,740 22,002 90,162 68,160 66 67 Debt securities ................................................................................ -100,626 313,905 414,531 73,026 58,137 160,740 22,002 90,162 68,160 67 68 U.S. Treasury securities ..................................................................... -107,856 306,847 414,703 71,890 54,975 159,167 20,816 90,051 69,235 68 69 Short term ................................................................................. -55,864 33,539 89,403 317 3,820 9,132 20,270 13,560 -6,710 69 70 Long term .................................................................................. -51,992 273,308 325,300 71,573 51,155 150,035 546 76,491 75,945 70 71 State and local government long-term securities .............................................. 7,230 7,058 -172 1,136 3,162 1,574 1,186 111 -1,075 71 p Preliminary r Revised Note: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 8. U.S. International Financial Transactions for Other Investment /1/ [Millions of dollars] Line Line 2016 r 2017 r Change: Not seasonally adjusted Change: 2016 to 2017 2017 2017 2017 2018 2017:IV to 2017 I r II r III r IV r I p 2018:I Assets and liabilities by instrument 1 Net U.S. acquisition of other investment assets (table 1, line 70) ................................. -2,723 218,522 221,245 89,505 85,095 94,804 -50,883 8,930 59,813 1 By type of claim on foreign residents: 2 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... -91,317 171,952 263,269 62,730 25,883 78,488 4,850 -22,575 -27,425 2 3 Currency (short term) ........................................................................ n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 3 4 Deposits ..................................................................................... -91,317 171,952 263,269 62,730 25,883 78,488 4,850 -22,575 -27,425 4 5 Short term ................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 5 6 Long term .................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 6 7 Loans .......................................................................................... 87,690 40,862 -46,828 21,959 59,564 15,099 -55,760 33,191 88,951 7 8 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 8 9 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 9 10 Insurance technical reserves ................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 10 11 Trade credit and advances ...................................................................... 903 5,708 4,805 4,817 -352 1,217 26 -1,686 -1,712 11 12 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 12 13 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 13 14 Net U.S. incurrence of other investment liabilities (table 1, line 93) ............................. 15,725 383,671 367,946 156,633 85,050 102,701 39,288 74,626 35,338 14 By type of liability to foreign residents: 15 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... 17,199 217,427 200,228 61,051 110,745 -15,792 61,423 -1,719 -63,142 15 16 Currency (short term) ........................................................................ 42,311 69,706 27,395 20,764 15,830 15,850 17,262 16,970 -292 16 17 Deposits ..................................................................................... -25,112 147,721 172,833 40,287 94,915 -31,642 44,161 -18,689 -62,850 17 18 Short term ................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 18 19 Long term .................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 19 20 Loans .......................................................................................... -7,574 150,834 158,408 87,071 -25,350 112,549 -23,436 67,255 90,691 20 21 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 21 22 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 22 23 Insurance technical reserves ................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 23 24 Trade credit and advances ...................................................................... 6,101 15,410 9,309 8,511 -346 5,943 1,302 9,090 7,788 24 25 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 25 26 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 26 27 Special drawing rights allocations ............................................................. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 27 Assets by sector of U.S. holder 28 Net U.S. acquisition of other investment assets (line 1) ........................................... -2,723 218,522 221,245 89,505 85,095 94,804 -50,883 8,930 59,813 28 29 Central bank ..................................................................................... 4,566 6,504 1,938 -488 -2,005 550 8,447 -7,056 -15,503 29 30 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... 4,566 6,504 1,938 -488 -2,005 550 8,447 -7,056 -15,503 30 31 Deposits ..................................................................................... 4,566 6,504 1,938 -488 -2,005 550 8,447 -7,056 -15,503 31 32 Short term ................................................................................. 4,566 6,504 1,938 -488 -2,005 550 8,447 -7,056 -15,503 32 33 Deposit-taking institutions except central bank .................................................. 27,350 24,466 -2,884 -4,878 54,734 -716 -24,674 20,261 44,935 33 34 Of which: Interbank transactions ............................................................. -66,288 -3,717 62,571 -10,316 19,995 -10,323 -3,073 9,908 12,981 34 35 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... -2,370 -47,964 -45,594 -12,313 -23,777 -20,868 8,994 6,927 -2,067 35 36 Deposits ..................................................................................... -2,370 -47,964 -45,594 -12,313 -23,777 -20,868 8,994 6,927 -2,067 36 37 Of which: Resale agreements .............................................................. 72,962 18,970 -53,992 17,421 17,380 -21,352 5,521 -8,825 -14,346 37 38 Short term ................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 38 39 Long term .................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 39 40 Loans .......................................................................................... 29,720 72,430 42,710 7,435 78,511 20,152 -33,668 13,333 47,001 40 41 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 41 42 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 42 43 Other financial institutions and nonfinancial institutions except general government ............. -35,170 186,537 221,707 94,728 32,760 93,096 -34,048 -4,223 29,825 43 44 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... -93,513 213,412 306,925 75,531 51,665 98,807 -12,591 -22,447 -9,856 44 45 Deposits ..................................................................................... -93,513 213,412 306,925 75,531 51,665 98,807 -12,591 -22,447 -9,856 45 46 Short term ................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 46 47 Long term .................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 47 48 Loans .......................................................................................... 57,440 -32,584 -90,024 14,380 -18,554 -6,927 -21,483 19,909 41,392 48 49 Of which: Resale agreements ................................................................ 42,950 -51,715 -94,665 -3,678 -25,724 -3,164 -19,150 -4,240 14,910 49 50 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 50 51 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 51 52 Insurance technical reserves ................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 52 53 Trade credit and advances ...................................................................... 903 5,708 4,805 4,817 -352 1,217 26 -1,686 -1,712 53 54 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 54 55 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 55 56 General government ............................................................................... 531 1,015 484 143 -394 1,874 -608 -52 556 56 57 Loans .......................................................................................... 531 1,015 484 143 -394 1,874 -608 -52 556 57 58 Long term .................................................................................... 531 1,015 484 143 -394 1,874 -608 -52 556 58 Liabilities by sector of U.S. issuer 59 Net U.S. incurrence of other investment liabilities (line 14) ...................................... 15,725 383,671 367,946 156,633 85,050 102,701 39,288 74,626 35,338 59 60 Central bank ..................................................................................... 70,407 48,337 -22,070 8,378 13,513 5,432 21,015 13,353 -7,662 60 61 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... 70,407 48,337 -22,070 8,378 13,513 5,432 21,015 13,353 -7,662 61 62 Currency (short term) ........................................................................ 42,311 69,706 27,395 20,764 15,830 15,850 17,262 16,970 -292 62 63 Deposits ..................................................................................... 28,096 -21,369 -49,465 -12,386 -2,317 -10,418 3,753 -3,617 -7,370 63 64 Short term ................................................................................. 28,096 -21,369 -49,465 -12,386 -2,317 -10,418 3,753 -3,617 -7,370 64 65 Deposit-taking institutions except central bank .................................................. -87,835 188,954 276,789 64,284 56,319 31,168 37,183 -43,020 -80,203 65 66 Of which: Interbank transactions ............................................................. -173,117 135,056 308,173 44,570 50,507 12,555 27,423 -33,074 -60,497 66 67 Currency and deposits .......................................................................... -55,500 172,214 227,714 39,220 83,238 -5,620 55,376 -15,317 -70,693 67 68 Deposits ..................................................................................... -55,500 172,214 227,714 39,220 83,238 -5,620 55,376 -15,317 -70,693 68 69 Of which: Repurchase agreements .......................................................... 38,874 55,745 16,871 5,532 24,003 -18,115 44,326 -35,759 -80,085 69 70 Short term ................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 70 71 Long term .................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 71 72 Loans .......................................................................................... -32,335 16,739 49,074 25,064 -26,919 36,788 -18,193 -27,703 -9,510 72 73 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 73 74 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 74 75 Other financial institutions and nonfinancial institutions except general government ............. 24,803 139,223 114,420 82,358 12,641 64,647 -20,423 99,960 120,383 75 76 Currency and deposits /2/ ...................................................................... 2,291 -3,125 -5,416 13,452 13,995 -15,604 -14,968 246 15,214 76 77 Deposits ..................................................................................... 2,291 -3,125 -5,416 13,452 13,995 -15,604 -14,968 246 15,214 77 78 Short term ................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 78 79 Long term .................................................................................. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 79 80 Loans .......................................................................................... 24,761 134,095 109,334 62,008 1,569 75,762 -5,244 94,959 100,203 80 81 Of which: Repurchase agreements ............................................................ 9,292 -12,727 -22,019 16,435 -8,760 2,138 -22,539 17,140 39,679 81 82 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 82 83 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 83 84 Insurance technical reserves ................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 84 85 Trade credit and advances ...................................................................... -2,249 8,253 10,502 6,898 -2,923 4,489 -211 4,756 4,967 85 86 Short term ................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 86 87 Long term .................................................................................... n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 87 88 General government ............................................................................... 8,350 7,157 -1,193 1,613 2,577 1,455 1,513 4,334 2,821 88 89 Trade credit and advances ...................................................................... 8,350 7,157 -1,193 1,613 2,577 1,455 1,513 4,334 2,821 89 90 Long term .................................................................................... 8,350 7,157 -1,193 1,613 2,577 1,455 1,513 4,334 2,821 90 91 Special drawing rights allocations ............................................................. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 91 p Preliminary r Revised n.a. Not available 1. Other investment includes financial-account transactions other than transactions for direct investment, portfolio investment, financial derivatives other than reserves, and reserve assets. 2. Consists of near-deposit instruments issued by other financial institutions. Note: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis June 20, 2018 Table 9. Updates to U.S. International Transactions [Millions of dollars, quarters seasonally adjusted] Balance on goods and services Balance on primary income Balance on secondary income Balance on current account Balance on capital account Net lending (+) or net borrowing (-) from financial-account transactions Previously Revised Revision Previously Revised Revision Previously Revised Revision Previously Revised Revision Previously Revised Revision Previously Revised Revision published published published published published published Years 2009...... -383,774 -383,774 0 115,160 115,160 0 -103,907 -103,907 0 -372,521 -372,521 0 -140 -140 0 -239,386 -239,386 0 2010...... -494,658 -495,225 -567 168,221 168,221 0 -104,261 -104,261 0 -430,698 -431,265 -567 -157 -157 0 -446,411 -446,415 -3 2011...... -548,625 -549,699 -1,074 211,084 211,084 0 -107,047 -107,047 0 -444,589 -445,662 -1,074 -1,186 -1,186 0 -525,636 -525,998 -362 2012...... -536,773 -537,408 -635 207,475 207,475 0 -96,900 -96,900 0 -426,198 -426,832 -635 6,904 6,904 0 -448,857 -448,205 652 2013...... -461,876 -461,135 742 205,977 205,977 0 -93,643 -93,643 0 -349,543 -348,801 742 -412 -412 0 -403,979 -400,259 3,721 2014...... -490,336 -489,584 752 210,774 218,391 7,617 -94,238 -94,006 231 -373,800 -365,199 8,601 -45 -45 0 -326,836 -297,255 29,581 2015...... -500,445 -498,525 1,920 180,962 203,608 22,646 -115,116 -112,848 2,268 -434,598 -407,764 26,834 -42 -42 0 -333,155 -325,948 7,207 2016...... -504,793 -502,001 2,792 173,225 193,023 19,798 -120,117 -123,895 -3,778 -451,685 -432,873 18,812 -59 -59 0 -377,685 -385,078 -7,393 2017...... -568,442 -552,277 16,165 216,998 221,731 4,733 -114,802 -118,597 -3,794 -466,246 -449,142 17,104 24,847 24,746 -100 -349,191 -331,860 17,332 Quarters 2009: I... -94,771 -94,771 0 22,655 22,655 0 -23,553 -23,553 0 -95,670 -95,670 0 -20 -20 0 -16,117 -16,117 0 II........ -81,444 -81,444 0 22,252 22,252 0 -27,145 -27,145 0 -86,336 -86,336 0 -29 -29 0 -20,061 -20,061 0 III....... -98,547 -98,547 0 36,093 36,093 0 -28,559 -28,559 0 -91,013 -91,013 0 -36 -36 0 -38,861 -38,861 0 IV........ -109,012 -109,012 0 34,160 34,160 0 -24,652 -24,652 0 -99,503 -99,503 0 -56 -56 0 -164,347 -164,347 0 2010: I... -117,954 -118,266 -312 41,658 41,658 0 -29,032 -29,032 0 -105,328 -105,640 -312 -3 -3 0 -78,916 -79,102 -186 II........ -128,754 -128,809 -55 41,903 41,903 0 -24,438 -24,438 0 -111,289 -111,344 -55 -2 -2 0 -34,733 -34,663 69 III....... -129,376 -129,557 -181 40,366 40,366 0 -26,108 -26,108 0 -115,118 -115,299 -181 -146 -146 0 -238,416 -238,472 -56 IV........ -118,575 -118,594 -19 44,294 44,294 0 -24,683 -24,683 0 -98,963 -98,983 -19 -7 -7 0 -94,347 -94,177 169 2011: I... -134,319 -135,041 -722 47,701 47,701 0 -28,506 -28,506 0 -115,124 -115,847 -722 -29 -29 0 -209,210 -209,742 -532 II........ -138,879 -138,842 38 48,662 48,662 0 -27,090 -27,090 0 -117,307 -117,269 38 -854 -854 0 -138,486 -138,259 227 III....... -133,962 -134,670 -709 55,165 55,165 0 -25,287 -25,287 0 -104,083 -104,792 -709 -300 -300 0 -165,392 -165,911 -519 IV........ -141,466 -141,146 320 59,555 59,555 0 -26,165 -26,165 0 -108,076 -107,755 320 -3 -3 0 -12,548 -12,085 463 2012: I... -144,771 -144,840 -69 55,965 55,965 0 -26,615 -26,615 0 -115,422 -115,491 -69 -53 -53 0 -259,779 -258,914 865 II........ -136,685 -136,728 -43 50,835 50,835 0 -25,686 -25,686 0 -111,536 -111,579 -43 -241 -241 0 -53,290 -53,226 64 III....... -127,540 -127,977 -436 50,908 50,908 0 -23,592 -23,592 0 -100,224 -100,661 -436 -470 -470 0 -1,207 -1,628 -422 IV........ -127,777 -127,863 -86 49,768 49,768 0 -21,007 -21,007 0 -99,016 -99,102 -86 7,668 7,668 0 -134,582 -134,437 145 2013: I... -119,610 -119,068 542 47,415 47,204 -211 -22,443 -22,441 3 -94,637 -94,304 333 -40 -40 0 -47,344 -47,980 -636 II........ -117,731 -117,165 567 51,594 50,805 -789 -24,404 -24,432 -28 -90,541 -90,791 -250 -227 -227 0 -35,871 -36,060 -189 III....... -117,070 -117,425 -355 53,331 54,259 928 -24,969 -24,950 20 -88,709 -88,116 593 -146 -146 0 -144,189 -141,943 2,245 IV........ -107,466 -107,478 -12 53,636 53,709 72 -21,826 -21,821 5 -75,656 -75,590 66 (*) (*) 0 -176,576 -174,276 2,300 2014: I... -122,487 -121,862 625 54,196 55,300 1,104 -22,979 -22,970 9 -91,271 -89,533 1,738 -43 -43 0 -113,710 -113,676 34 II........ -125,035 -125,091 -56 51,619 53,418 1,800 -14,481 -14,437 44 -87,897 -86,110 1,787 -2 -2 0 -99,077 -82,178 16,899 III....... -119,959 -119,583 376 55,498 59,143 3,645 -27,420 -27,368 52 -91,881 -87,807 4,073 -1 -1 0 -68,860 -58,459 10,401 IV........ -122,855 -123,048 -192 49,462 50,530 1,068 -29,358 -29,231 127 -102,751 -101,749 1,002 (*) (*) 0 -45,188 -42,942 2,246 2015: I... -127,059 -125,708 1,351 48,375 52,378 4,003 -29,345 -28,270 1,075 -108,029 -101,600 6,429 -22 -22 0 -135,889 -121,288 14,601 II........ -122,980 -121,473 1,506 42,302 49,152 6,850 -25,819 -24,677 1,142 -106,496 -96,999 9,498 -20 -20 0 -136,663 -133,654 3,010 III....... -126,757 -127,531 -774 42,013 49,016 7,003 -31,819 -31,035 784 -116,563 -109,550 7,014 -1 -1 0 -40,736 -36,535 4,201 IV........ -123,649 -123,813 -164 48,272 53,062 4,790 -28,133 -28,865 -732 -103,509 -99,616 3,893 0 0 0 -19,866 -34,471 -14,605 2016: I... -126,079 -125,261 818 38,059 45,447 7,389 -31,189 -32,087 -898 -119,210 -111,901 7,309 -58 -58 0 -85,363 -101,609 -16,246 II........ -123,777 -122,099 1,678 42,746 47,543 4,796 -27,169 -28,501 -1,332 -108,200 -103,057 5,142 0 0 0 -42,274 -17,541 24,733 III....... -120,889 -121,770 -881 41,123 43,909 2,786 -30,504 -31,465 -962 -110,270 -109,327 943 -1 -1 0 -175,295 -199,854 -24,560 IV........ -134,048 -132,871 1,177 51,297 56,124 4,827 -31,255 -31,842 -587 -114,006 -108,589 5,417 0 0 0 -74,753 -66,073 8,680 2017: I... -137,845 -134,959 2,886 50,429 52,604 2,176 -25,455 -25,355 100 -112,871 -107,709 5,162 -1 -1 0 -87,693 -68,606 19,087 II........ -141,446 -136,700 4,746 50,879 48,535 -2,344 -33,175 -33,672 -497 -123,742 -121,837 1,905 0 0 0 -109,942 -120,111 -10,169 III....... -135,265 -132,791 2,474 58,495 58,222 -274 -24,706 -28,878 -4,172 -101,475 -103,447 -1,972 24,868 24,787 -80 -121,757 -111,891 9,866 IV........ -153,886 -147,826 6,060 57,195 62,371 5,175 -31,467 -30,692 775 -128,158 -116,148 12,010 -20 -40 -20 -29,799 -31,252 -1,453 (*) Transactions are between zero and +/- $500,000 Note: Details may not add to totals because of rounding. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis