Macro · Southern Cone
Key Facts
—The record. Argentina posted a trade surplus of three-and-a-half billion dollars in May, its largest ever for the month.
—The milestone. In just five months the country has already beaten its entire surplus for all of 2025.
—The driver. Energy exports jumped about one hundred and sixty-seven per cent, powered by Vaca Muerta shale.
—The exports. Total exports hit a record of nine-and-a-half billion dollars, with every category rising.
—The streak. It was the thirtieth month in a row that Argentina sold more abroad than it bought in.
—The partner. China was the top trading partner for the month, as exports there surged.
A few months ago Argentina’s exports were slipping; now the Argentina trade surplus has smashed through a record, and the country has earned more from trade in five months than it managed in the whole of last year.
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A record Argentina trade surplus in May
Argentina’s official statistics agency reported that the country ran a trade surplus of three-and-a-half billion dollars in May. That is its biggest monthly surplus on record, dwarfing the six hundred million dollars of a year earlier and beating what analysts had expected.
It was also the thirtieth consecutive month in the black, an unbroken run of selling more to the world than it buys. The cumulative surplus for the first five months of the year reached eleven-point-seven billion dollars.
That figure carries a striking message. In just five months, Argentina has already surpassed the eleven-point-two billion dollar surplus it recorded across the whole of 2025.
Why the Argentina trade surplus is surging
The headline driver is energy. Exports of fuel and energy soared by roughly one hundred and sixty-seven per cent compared with a year earlier, lifted by higher crude oil and fuel shipments.
Behind that number sits Vaca Muerta, the vast shale formation in Argentine Patagonia. Once a costly importer of fuel, the country is now pumping and selling enough oil and gas to turn energy into one of its largest export earners.
The strength was broad, though, not just an energy story. Total exports hit a record nine-and-a-half billion dollars with every category rising, from farm goods and processed foods to industrial manufactures, while imports actually fell.
Processed farm goods such as fats, oils and meat remained the single largest export group. Primary products like soybeans rose strongly too, and even industrial manufactures, often the weakest link, advanced by a fifth.
A turnaround from earlier in the year
The May figures mark a clear reversal of the mood from a few months back. In February, Argentina’s exports actually fell for the first time in eight months, raising questions about whether the trade boom was running out of steam.
Those doubts have, for now, been answered. Economy Minister Luis Caputo was quick to celebrate the data, highlighting that the energy trade balance alone posted what he called the largest positive figure in the country’s history.
China featured prominently too, ranking as Argentina’s top trading partner for the month. Exports to the Asian giant jumped sharply, helping Argentina run a modest surplus with a country it usually buys heavily from.
That is a notable swing, since China is normally a source of large deficits for Argentina. A surplus with Beijing, however small, hints at how much the export surge is reshaping the country’s trade map.
What it means for investors
For President Javier Milei, the numbers are a political and economic gift. A steady flow of trade dollars helps the central bank rebuild reserves, the cushion Argentina needs to meet heavy debt payments due over the next two years.
The shift has not gone unnoticed by markets. A major ratings agency recently lifted Argentina’s credit score, pointing specifically to the energy surplus as a structural reason the country can now pay its way.
The caution is that a trade surplus built partly on weak imports can flatter the picture, since soft import demand reflects a still-fragile domestic economy. The test ahead is whether Argentina can keep exporting at record pace even as growth, and with it the appetite for imports, returns.
Still, the direction of travel is what matters to outside investors. A country that for years burned scarce dollars importing fuel is now earning them by exporting it, a structural shift that steadies the currency in a way a single good harvest never could.
Frequently Asked Questions
How big was Argentina’s trade surplus in May?
Argentina posted a record trade surplus of three-and-a-half billion dollars in May 2026, its largest ever for the month. The five-month total of eleven-point-seven billion dollars has already beaten the surplus for all of 2025.
What is driving the surplus?
Energy is the main driver, with fuel and energy exports up about one hundred and sixty-seven per cent, powered by the Vaca Muerta shale formation. Farm goods, processed foods and industrial exports also rose, while imports fell.
Why does it matter for investors?
Trade dollars help Argentina’s central bank build reserves to meet large debt payments, and a major agency recently upgraded the country’s credit rating citing the energy surplus. The risk is that the surplus partly reflects weak imports from a still-fragile economy.
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