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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. trade deficit narrowed 4.1 percent in February to $65.7 billion, as imports fell by the largest amount in nearly a year and the bilateral trade gap with China shrank 22.7 percent, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday.
Wall Street analysts had expected weak consumer demand and softer oil prices to trim the monthly trade gap by only $1 billion, from the record set in January. The Commerce Department revised January's shortfall slightly higher to $68.6 billion.
The February trade gap was still the third highest on record, suggesting the annual trade deficit could surpass last year's record of $723.6 billion unless it begins shrinking much more rapidly in the coming months.
U.S. imports fell 2.3 percent in February to $178.7 billion, the largest month-to-month decline since March 2005, but still the second highest on record after January. Many analysts had expected imports to retreat after surging in the first month of 2006. The politically sensitive trade deficit with China narrowed significantly in February to $13.8 billion, the lowest level since March 2005.
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