Morning News: Trade gap with nine states widens to $11.17bn - By HMFS Research
Jun 26 2025
HMFS Research
- Pakistan’s trade deficit with nine neighbouring countries widened by 32.82 per cent to $11.17 billion during the first 11 months of the current fiscal year (FY25), up from $8.41bn in the same period a year earlier, official data showed. While exports to Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka recorded notable growth — buoyed in part by changing political dynamics in the region — the overall trade gap continued to expand due to surging imports, particularly from China, India and Bangladesh.
- Pakistan and the United States are heading toward finalising trade talks, exploring possibilities of a Preferential Trade Agreement (PTA) to incentivize trade on a reciprocal basis. In the aftermath of Field Marshal General Asim Munir’s recent visit to the US, both countries are finalising trade negotiations. Ways are being explored to either finalise the PTA or bilateral trade agreement (BTA). Washington has opted for BTT with those countries where the trade deficit runs into multi-billion-dollars per annum. The US can favour Pakistan by placing its textile exports in the category of 10 percent tariff after receiving incentivized based tariff on its exports of cotton and soybean to Pakistan. Both the countries are exploring incentives in line with the World Trade Organization (WTO) conditions, said the official sources.
- The overall Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) rose by 9.2 per cent in the fourth quarter of FY25 compared to the preceding quarter, signalling a steady improvement in public sentiment regarding the economy and personal finances. The index, which is measured on a scale of 0 to 200 — with 100 as the neutral point — recorded a score of 96.2 in Q4FY25, up from 88.1 in the previous quarter. A score below 100 indicates pessimism, while a reading above 100 denotes optimism.