Santa Fe New Mexican

Retailers brace for flood of online returns

Mail system faces challenge of shipping COVID-19 vaccines amid influx of packages in coming weeks

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

NEW YORK — A huge surge in online shopping during the pandemic has been a savior for retailers, but it comes at a price.

Shoppers are expected to return twice as many items as they did during last year’s holiday period, costing companies roughly $1.1 billion, according to Narvar Inc., a software and technology company that manages online returns for hundreds of brands.

Retailers don’t want the returns, but they do want shoppers who may not feel safe going to stores to be comfortabl­e buying things they haven’t seen or tried on in person.

People have been doing so much online buying since March that carriers like UPS and FedEx were already at full capacity before the holiday shopping season. And online sales just keep soaring. From Nov. 1 though Tuesday, they spiked 32 percent to $171.6 billion, compared with the year-ago period, according to Adobe Analytics. The massive challenges of shipping COVID-19 vaccines in the weeks and months ahead could put further pressure on the system.

That means shoppers who return items may not get refunds until two weeks after they’re sent back to the store, said Sara Skirboll, shopping expert at deals site RetailMeNo­t.

Many companies are offering more locations to drop off returns, which cuts down shipping costs and gets refunds to shoppers more quickly.

Last year, Kohl’s began allowing Amazon returns at all of its 1,000 stores — customers drop off items for free, with no box or label needed. This year, Amazon customers can also return items at 500 Whole Foods Market stores. That’s in addition to Amazon’s deal with UPS to allow similar drop-offs at UPS stores.

Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, announced earlier this week it will pick up items shipped and sold by Walmart. com from customers’ homes for free through a new partnershi­p with FedEx. The service will continue beyond the holiday shopping season.

David Bassuk, global co-leader of Alix-Partners’ retail practice, says stores are increasing­ly making it easier for shoppers to feel less guilty about returning items.

“If they’re not sure of their size, they order both sizes,” he says. “If they’re not sure which color, they order both colors. And if they’re not sure which item, they order them all. But it’s costly to the retailers, and the retailers are not well positioned to handle all the cost.”

On average, people return 25 percent of items they buy online, compared with only 8 percent of what they buy in stores, according to Forrester Research’s online analyst Sucharita Mulpuru. For clothing it’s even higher, about 30 percent.

But not all rejected items are the same and have varying levels of depreciati­on, experts say. After an item is sent back to the retailer, the company must assess its condition and decide whether to resell it, send it to a liquidator or the landfill.

Optoro, a return logistics company, estimates the value of fashion apparel depreciate­s by 20 percent to 50 percent over an eight-to 16-week period. That’s why it’s so critical to get rejected items back and on sale again quickly.

Returns are also complicate­d this year because retailers pushed people to buy gifts early to avoid shipping delays, meaning the return window may be closed by the time Christmas rolls around.

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