Canada March Wholesale Trade Report (Text)
The following is the text of Canada’s wholesale trade report for March from Statistics Canada.
Wholesale sales rose 0.4% in March to $48.7 billion. Higher sales were reported in three of the seven subsectors, accounting for almost half of total wholesale sales.
In the last 12 months, Canadian wholesalers posted nine monthly increases, which translated into a growth rate of 6.0% relative to March 2011.
In volume terms, wholesale sales were unchanged in March.
Motor vehicle sales post the largest gain
In March, the largest increase in dollar terms was in the motor vehicle and parts subsector. If this subsector is excluded, wholesale sales were unchanged.
Sales in the motor vehicle and parts subsector rose 2.4% to $8.0 billion in March. The advance largely reflected higher sales in the motor vehicle industry.
After declining in the previous two months, wholesale sales of food, beverages and tobacco grew 1.3% in March as a result of higher sales in the food industry (+1.4%), which makes up nearly 90% of this subsector.
Sales in the building materials and supplies subsector increased 1.7% in March on the strength of higher sales in all of its components.
The largest decline in dollars was in the machinery, equipment and supplies subsector.
Sales in the machinery, equipment and supplies subsector fell 1.4%, reflecting lower sales in all of its industries. The leading contributor was the computer and communications equipment and supplies industry, where sales were down 2.7%.
Quebec leads in sales growth
In March, five provinces posted gains.
Wholesalers in Quebec contributed the most to the national increase, followed by wholesalers in Ontario. Both provinces benefited from growth in sales in the motor vehicle and parts subsector and the food, beverage and tobacco subsector.
In Quebec, sales were up 2.3%, the highest growth rate since January 2011. The increase followed several months of relatively flat sales in the province.
Ontario posted a 0.6% increase in wholesale sales in March, its second consecutive advance.
In Western Canada, only Manitoba (+1.8%) saw higher sales. The largest sales decrease was in Saskatchewan (-7.2%), its fourth decline in five months.
Inventories continue to rise
Inventories grew 0.9% to $59.6 billion in March. Inventories were up in 15 of the 25 industries.
Wholesalers in the construction, forestry, mining and industrial machinery, equipment and supplies industry (+3.3%) and the personal goods industry (+6.3%) had the largest inventory increases in dollar terms.
The inventory-to-sales ratio was unchanged at 1.22 in March.
The inventory-to-sales ratio is a measure of the time in months required to exhaust inventories if sales were to remain at their current level.
To contact the reporter on this story: Ilan Kolet in Ottawa at ikolet@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Marco Babic at mbabic@bloomberg.net

Rate this Page
Bloomberg moderates all comments. Comments that are abusive or off-topic will not be posted to the site. Excessively long comments may be moderated as well. Bloomberg cannot facilitate requests to remove comments or explain individual moderation decisions.