Japan posted a surprise trade surplus in February, after a record high deficit the previous month, as external demand picked up.
The surplus stood at 32.9bn yen ($394m; £248m), the Ministry of Finance said. In January the deficit came in at 1.5tn yen.
Japan has had to increase energy imports, as most of its nuclear reactors remain shut.
Analysts said this was not necessarily a sign of a swing to surplus for Japan.
Export push
"The trade data was a positive surprise as falls in exports were smaller than expected," said Taro Saito from NLI Research Institute in Tokyo.
"But it is too early to conclude the trade balance has returned to a surplus trend."
Overseas shipments fell 2.7% in February from the year earlier, the data showed. Most forecasts were for a drop of 6.5%. Imports rose 9.2% from the previous year.
The improving health of the US economy has contributed to increased demand for Japanese goods.
"Exports to the United States are growing and we have seen signs that the US economy has hit a bottom, so this is a positive sign for Japan's exports," said Shuji Tonouchi from Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities in Tokyo.
Energy worries
Japanese trade has been in deficit for five months, in large part because of surging demand for imported fossil fuels.
After last year's earthquake and tsunami led to the worst nuclear accident in 25 years, the government decided to take most of Japan's nuclear reactors offline.
More than 30% of Japan's electricity supply was generated by nuclear energy.
The rising price of oil globally and a weaker yen have caused the import bill to swell, exacerbating the deficit.
bbc.co.uk
The surplus stood at 32.9bn yen ($394m; £248m), the Ministry of Finance said. In January the deficit came in at 1.5tn yen.
Japan has had to increase energy imports, as most of its nuclear reactors remain shut.
Analysts said this was not necessarily a sign of a swing to surplus for Japan.
Export push
"The trade data was a positive surprise as falls in exports were smaller than expected," said Taro Saito from NLI Research Institute in Tokyo.
"But it is too early to conclude the trade balance has returned to a surplus trend."
Overseas shipments fell 2.7% in February from the year earlier, the data showed. Most forecasts were for a drop of 6.5%. Imports rose 9.2% from the previous year.
The improving health of the US economy has contributed to increased demand for Japanese goods.
"Exports to the United States are growing and we have seen signs that the US economy has hit a bottom, so this is a positive sign for Japan's exports," said Shuji Tonouchi from Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities in Tokyo.
Energy worries
Japanese trade has been in deficit for five months, in large part because of surging demand for imported fossil fuels.
After last year's earthquake and tsunami led to the worst nuclear accident in 25 years, the government decided to take most of Japan's nuclear reactors offline.
More than 30% of Japan's electricity supply was generated by nuclear energy.
The rising price of oil globally and a weaker yen have caused the import bill to swell, exacerbating the deficit.
bbc.co.uk
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