Imperial Valley Press

Suppliers reluctant to ship goods without credit insurance

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NEW YORK (AP) — Gold Medal Internatio­nal is sitting on millions of dollars worth of socks at its North Carolina warehouse that it can’t ship to stores.

The reason? The 66-year-old family-owned sock maker can’t get enough credit insurance to cover potential losses if the stores can’t pay for the goods they’ve ordered.

Without that insurance, Gold Medal — and thousands of other suppliers facing a similar dilemma — would be on the hook for unpaid bills. But not shipping the goods to retailers means losing sales and big write-downs on inventory. The problem will only get worse if retailers can’t stock their shelves and shoppers can’t find what they want heading into the critical holiday season.

“I got the goods, I made them. I don’t have a liquidity problem,” said Paul Rotstein, who’s been president of New Yorkbased Gold Medal for 30 years. “But if I can’t ship $12 million worth of orders, guess what? I have a big liquidity problem.”

Before COVID-19, suppliers routinely relied on so-called trade credit insurance to get the reassuranc­e they needed to design products, receive orders, and ship to retailers.

Now, with the pandemic creating so much economic uncertaint­y, many retailers are struggling and credit insurers are unwilling to take on the risk. In fact, many insurers will only provide protection on orders to big box stores and others that have been able to withstand the pandemic, leaving in the lurch a huge swath of non-essential small and medium retailers that are still trying to claw their way out of months of lockdowns that decimated their businesses.

Trade credit insurance provides a financial backstop for at least $ 600 billion in annual U. S. sales, according to Robert Litan, an economist and attorney, who published a report in early July on the issue for Econ One, an economic consulting firm. That doesn’t include the estimated $50 billion loss in orders that suppliers will be too reluctant to ship, Litan estimates.

Without the safety net, these suppliers — 60% of which have revenues of $ 20 million or less, according to Litan — are starting to make hard choices about whether to maintain their current production level or cut back on orders to minimize the risk, experts say.

Rotstein says his credit insurer hasn’t pulled back coverage on his accounts with big retailers like Amazon or Dollar General but it’s cut back or eliminated coverage for momand-pop stores and many non- essential chains he declined to name.

“Credit insurance lubricates small businesses— it is the lifeblood,” Litan said, noting that credit insurance is a prerequisi­te for companies to maintain credit lines with banks in order to continue operations and avoid further disruption in their supply networks.

 ?? AP Photo/John Bazemore ?? Elf on the Shelf figures are piled in a box at the company’s studio on Aug. 27 in Atlanta.
AP Photo/John Bazemore Elf on the Shelf figures are piled in a box at the company’s studio on Aug. 27 in Atlanta.

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