Imports: Grains from cereals
U.S. imports of Grains from cereals increased 11.85 percent through August to $335.79 million.
Top Sources
| Rank | Country | YTD |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Thailand | $48.54 M |
| 2 | Canada | $35.92 M |
| 3 | Belgium | $34.73 M |
| 4 | Germany | $34.07 M |
| 5 | Denmark | $33.63 M |
| 6 | The Netherlands | $26.58 M |
| 7 | Chile | $25.37 M |
| 8 | Mexico | $17.44 M |
| 9 | Brazil | $13.42 M |
| 10 | Poland | $13.04 M |
Top Gateways
| Rank | Port | YTD |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Port of Newark | $106 M |
| 2 | Port of Los Angeles | $38.43 M |
| 3 | Port of Virginia | $25.85 M |
| 4 | Port of Houston | $16.57 M |
| 5 | Port Laredo | $16.37 M |
| 6 | Port of Long Beach | $16.35 M |
| 7 | Port of Chicago land-based cargo | $16.04 M |
| 8 | Port of Chester, PA | $14.54 M |
| 9 | Pembina Border Crossing, ND | $9.63 M |
| 10 | Port of Charleston | $8.63 M |
Top markets Grains from cereals
Total:
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Grains from cereals by port
Total:
Unavailable, check our plans to know more.
U.S. imports of Grains from cereals increased 11.85 percent through August to $335.79 million
The category ranked 525 through August among the roughly 1,265 import commodity groupings as classified by Census. It ranked No. 550 for the last full year with a total value of $452.07 million, a $60.21 million, 15.36 percent increase from the 2023 total.
Through August of this year the leading sources were No. 1 Thailand, No. 2 Canada, No. 3 Belgium, No. 4 Germany and No. 5 Denmark. The leading sources were No. 1 Port of Newark, No. 2 Port of Los Angeles, No. 3 Port of Virginia, No. 4 Port of Houston and No. 5 Port Laredo.
In the last previous full year, the leading sources were No. 1 Thailand, No. 2 Germany, No. 3 Canada, No. 4 Denmark and No. 5 The Netherlands. The leading sources were No. 1 Port of Newark, No. 2 Port of Los Angeles, No. 3 Port of Long Beach, No. 4 Port of Virginia and No. 5 Port of Chicago land-based cargo.
Looking at specific airports, seaports and border crossings, the top five through the first eight months of the year were:
Highlights for the top five ports:
- Port of Newark rose 2.33 percent compared to last year to $106 million.
- Port of Los Angeles rose 6.21 percent compared to last year to $38.43 million.
- Port of Virginia rose 78.07 percent compared to last year to $25.85 million.
- Port of Houston rose 22.05 percent compared to last year to $16.57 million.
- Port Laredo rose 0.84 percent compared to last year to $16.37 million.
There are several hundred airports, seaports and border crossings that handle international trade; they are, in turn, part of the roughly four dozen U.S. Customs districts.
Highlights for the top five foreign sources:
- U.S. imports from No. 1 Thailand decreased $2.6 million, 5.09 percent, (14.45 percent market share).
- U.S. imports from No. 2 Canada increased $4.46 million, 14.18 percent, (10.7 percent market share).
- U.S. imports from No. 3 Belgium increased $12.48 million, 56.1 percent, (10.34 percent market share).
- U.S. imports from No. 4 Germany increased $1.8 million, 5.59 percent, (10.15 percent market share).
- U.S. imports from No. 5 Denmark increased $5.66 million, 20.23 percent, (10.02 percent market share).
All totaled, 55.66 percent of all these Grains from cereals imports to the United States were shipped from the top five sources through August of this year. That is equal to $186.9 million of the $335.79 million total.
All totaled, 60.52 percent of all these Grains from cereals imports to the United States were shipped to the top five Ports through August of this year. That is equal to $203.22 million of the $335.79 million total.