Business Day

Retailers scrambling after Red Sea attacks

- Siddharth Cavale and Helen Reid

Retailers worldwide are stocking up on goods before China’s Lunar New Year holiday and seeking air or rail alternativ­es to transporta­tion via the Red Sea in a scramble to avoid empty shelves in the northern hemisphere spring, according executives and industry experts.

One European retailer said it is delaying marketing campaigns for certain goods until stocks are secured. Major container ship operators such as Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd are rerouting vessels away from the Suez Canal — the shortest route from Asia to Europe — after militant attacks on vessels in the Red Sea.

The diversions have raised fears of another prolonged disruption to global trade just as supply chains unsnarl after the Covid-19 pandemic. Going around Southern Africa instead adds $1m in fuel costs and about 10 days to the journey.

Interviews with five retailers selling everything from furniture to mechanical components, and with analysts, show the unusual steps companies are taking to adapt.

US-based BDI Furniture is front-loading orders and relying more on factories in Turkey and Vietnam. It is also asking freight brokers to bypass the Panama and Suez canals and ship goods across the Pacific Ocean to California, where they can be transporte­d by rail to its warehouses on the East Coast.

Hanna Hajjar, vice-president of operations at BDI Furniture said it has low stocks of some media cabinets, bedroom and office furniture that are already on ships.

“We just did not expect all these recent delays,” he said, adding that the disruption­s have lengthened transit times from Vietnam by 10-15 days.

Companies transporti­ng goods from China to Europe and the US are considerin­g alternativ­es such as rail and air, but high prices mean they have to be strategic about which products to prioritise.

Hajjar says BDI is using the California route as a solution on a case-by-case basis because rates are now double the normal cost of shipping through Suez or Panama.

Even though Asia-to-Europe trade is most exposed to the Suez disruption­s, as much as 30% of shipments to the US East Coast move via the canal.

Retailers also face a deadline: on February 10 factories in China close for as long a month for the Lunar New Year holiday, so companies typically try to export as much as possible beforehand.

But with vessels rerouted, fewer ships will be back in China in time to load cargo before the holiday. That means probable delays to products intended to arrive on Western shelves in April or May. Logistics experts are already reporting a container shortage at Ningbo port in China.

“The worst thing to happen to a retailer is having a significan­t delay on a product that they won’t be able to market because of seasonalit­y,” said Rob Shaw, general manager for Europe, Middle East & Africa at inventory software company Fluent Commerce.

Aldi Nord, the European discount supermarke­t chain, said it may receive items such as household goods, toys and decoration­s later than planned, and is postponing the advertisin­g of specific products as a result. Next, the UK-based clothing, footwear and home products retailer, said the delays are manageable compared with those during the pandemic. But the group, which sources most of its products from Asia, could mitigate that through earlier ordering and using more air freight.

“The lessons [from Covid] are on stock being delayed — order a little bit earlier and allow for a little bit more air freight,” said CEO Simon Wolfson.

One option is a rail route from western China to Eastern Europe.

Craig Poole, UK MD of Cardinal Global Logistics, said the cost of using the route has jumped to about $9,000-$10,500 per 40foot container from about $7,000 in November, and is increasing daily.

IC Trade, which exports mechanical components from China to Italy, is exploring the rail option but “it’s not easy to find the space,” said founder Marco Castelli. “To make up for one vessel, you need 100 trains.”

Polish fashion retailer LPP said it is considerin­g rail or seaair alternativ­es for its “most urgent” collection­s.

RBC analysts said continued disruption­s could hurt European retailers’ gross profit margins, while the prospect of fresh supply chain strains increasing prices has raised fears of another bout of global inflation.

For some companies, the latest disruption­s highlight the need to permanentl­y shift supply chains so factories are closer to the end consumer, a process known as “near-shoring”.

 ?? /123RF/Kitzcorner ?? Stock: Retailers are worried about another disruption to trade just as supply chains unsnarl after the Covid pandemic.
/123RF/Kitzcorner Stock: Retailers are worried about another disruption to trade just as supply chains unsnarl after the Covid pandemic.

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