A new peak for wholesale activity
Sales in Alberta climbed $168 million to reach a record high of $8.7 billion in April
By Siddhartha Bhattacharya, ATB Economics 17 June 2022 1 min read
Wholesale revenues continued to advance in Alberta for the second straight month and led the gains nationally.
Seasonally adjusted sales climbed $168 million (+2.0%) to reach a record high of $8.7 billion in April, surpassing the previous peak set in January by $266 million (+3.1%).
Five out of seven sub-groups posted gains and were led by machinery, equipment and sales, which attained a new peak with a robust 6.8% monthly increase. Meanwhile, revenues of motor vehicles and parts (-6.5%) declined sharply but this was mostly offset by higher building material and supplies (+3.6%) sales.
Through the first four months of the year, unadjusted sales were up by $5.9 billion (+22.0%) relative to the same period in 2021. While every province posted year-to-date increases, Alberta stood second in line (in dollar terms) after Ontario.
It was a fairly lopsided story elsewhere in the country as seasonally-adjusted Canadian sales eased $410 million (-0.5%). Driven in part by lower imports of fertilizer from Russia, sales of agricultural supplies fell to a seven-month low in April.
Regionally, activity was down across six provinces on a monthly basis, with Quebec (-2.1%) posting the largest decline (in dollar terms).
Answer to the previous trivia question: According to Statistics Canada, there were 41,505 farms in Alberta in 2021.
Today’s trivia question: What percentage of Canada’s farms are located in Alberta?
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