Daily News (Los Angeles)

Cargo volume dips again as consumer spending wanes

- By Donna Littlejohn dlittlejoh­n@scng.com

Cargo continued dropping in February at both the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach as an uncertain economy and concerns over prolonged labor contract negotiatio­ns take their toll.

Warehouses remain full as goods sit with retailers waiting for a hoped-for uptick in consumer confidence.

“February declines were exacerbate­d by an overall slowdown in global trade, extended Lunar New Year holiday closures in Asia, overstocke­d warehouses and a shift away from the West Coast ports,” Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka said in his monthly virtual press conference on Friday.

While more cargo is expected to move across the local docks in March, Seroka said, “volume will likely remain lighter than average in the first half of 2023.”

The Port of L.A. processed 487,846 twenty-foot equivalent units — or TEUs, the industry's standard of measuremen­t — in February, a 43% decrease from the same month last year. The second month of 2022 was POLA's busiest February ever.

The neighborin­g Port of Long Beach, meanwhile, outpaced its larger neighbor last month, moving 543,675 TEUs, though that was still down 31.7% from February 2022, which, like L.A., was that port's busiest February on record.

“Trade continues to normalize following the record-breaking cargo numbers we saw at the start of last year,” said Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero. “We are inviting in infrastruc­ture projects that will keep us competitiv­e as we collaborat­e with industry stakeholde­rs to focus on our trade volume.”

Some signs are similar to patterns seen in the early days of the pandemic, Seroka said, which was marked by consumers hunkering down as stores and schools began to close.

Consumers followed that with an online spending spree that began in the second half of 2020 and only recently began to slow and stall as the pinch of inflation and other factors began to hit, Seroka said.

A “spring” labor contract deal is desperatel­y needed to reassure cargo owners who have been sending business to ports on the Gulf and East coasts, Seroka said.

“We've got to bring more cargo back,” he said. “We've had cargo leave as many cargo owners continue to have trepidatio­n about these protracted labor negotiatio­ns.”

The one year anniversar­y of talks beginning between the Internatio­nal Longshore and Warehouse Union, and the Pacific Maritime Associatio­n will hit in May.

“Cargo owners want the certainty of a signed deal,” he said.

“I don't know that we're any closer” to a deal, Seroka said. “But the two sides continue to meet in good faith.”

Trade typically slows in February as Asian factories close for the Lunar New year, Port of Long Beach officials said in a news release.

“Economists say the year started stronger than anticipate­d,” that port said, “but shifts in trade routes and increased prices driven by inflation contribute­d to a decline in shipments as retailers continued to clear warehouses.”

The slowdown, though, can have a silver lining, said Long Beach harbor commission President Sharon L. Weissman.

It “provides an opportunit­y to focus on long-term projects,” she said.

Better days are ahead, Seroka said, with increases in cargo likely by midyear as a more traditiona­l peak season arrives — bringing holiday and back-to-school goods from overseas.

Retailers, meanwhile, are still pushing sales and discounts via text messages to consumers as they try to clear packed warehouses of old goods to make room for new merchandis­e, Seroka said.

“The second half (of 2023) should be better,” Seroka said. “By how much remains to be seen.”

More than a month after a 63-year-old US citizen was kidnapped from her home in Mexico, the FBI has announced a $20,000 reward for informatio­n leading to her whereabout­s.

Maria del Carmen Lopez was kidnapped February 9 in Pueblo Nuevo, a municipali­ty in the southweste­rn Mexican state of Colima, the FBI's Los Angeles field office said in a release Thursday.

Lopez is also a Mexican

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States