Photo/Illutration Cars wait to be exported at Yokohama port on July 8, 2019. (AP file photo)

Japan recorded a trade deficit for the month of January Wednesday, as exports declined amid worries about the spread of a new virus that could deaden regional economic growth.

The trade deficit for last month totaled 1.3 trillion yen ($12 billion), the Finance Ministry said in a report.

That marked the third straight month of a trade deficit for the world’s third-largest economy.

In October, the nation managed to eke out a trade surplus, largely because falling crude oil prices offset a drop in exports.

Both Japan’s exports and imports to China fell in January, according to the ministry data. Exports and imports to the United States also fell for the month.

The outbreak of CODIV-19 that began late last year, halting factory production and crimping travel, has been worsening the worries about China’s economy, a key driver of regional growth.

Such worries added to those set off earlier by the trade policies of U.S. President Donald Trump.