The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Footwear firm mulls how to handle tariffs

Moving manufactur­ing to other nations poses issues, Xero Shoes says.

- Peter S. Goodman

Before the trade war threatened to upend everything, Lena Phoenix spent most of her hours puzzling over how to expand the thriving footwear business she and her husband had founded in their home in Colorado.

Now she is mostly consumed with finding a way around the tariffs that President Donald Trump just imposed, bringing expensive complicati­ons. The latest round increased the costs that Americans pay for $112 billion worth of goods imported from China, among them the shoes and sandals designed and sold by Phoenix’s company, Xero Shoes.

Trump has hailed his tariffs as a means of forcing U.S. companies to abandon China and make their goods at home. Phoenix has taken the trade war as impetus to seek alternativ­es to the Chinese factories that now make her company’s products. But the United States presents no viable options, she says. The tariffs have forced her to slow her business while exploring manufactur­ing plants in Southeast Asia.

“It’s just crazy,” Phoenix said. “There’s a lot of scrambling going on, and a lot of figuring out what to do.”

The story of Xero Shoes presents a challenge to Trump’s notion that tariffs are the key to an American manufactur­ing revival, revealing how they can jeopardize existing jobs by disrupting access to the global supply chain. Many American brands use Chinese plants to

make their goods. American factories depend on China to ship parts and electronic­s.

“It’s hard to imagine shoes and clothing coming back to the United States just because they are so labor intensive,” said Chad P. Bown, an internatio­nal trade expert at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics in Washington. “What matters is wage costs. It’s just cheaper to make those things in other places.”

Even if tariffs succeed in forcing production back to the United States, Bown added, humans are unlikely to secure the jobs. “The companies will figure out how to do the work with robots and technology,” he said.

In recent months, Xero has reacted to Trump’s threats in the very way he hoped: It has contemplat­ed moving away from China.

But it has not considered the United States. “There’s no capacity,” Phoenix said. She and her husband started their business a decade ago using credit card debt. They do not possess the tens of millions of dollars required to construct their own plant.

Instead, Xero has been researchin­g alternativ­es. Vietnam is the obvious place, a country that has been gaining investment as multinatio­nal companies shift manufactur­ing work outside China to avoid American tariffs. But space has gotten tight there.

Xero’s manufactur­ing agent in Asia has suggested that the company consider Bangladesh, Indonesia and Kenya. Phoenix, 51, knows nothing about these places, and the thought of new variables fills her with dread. The company previously shifted production from South Korea to China, and then switched Chinese factories. In every move, mishaps cost time and money.

“It’s a really challengin­g and dangerous thing to do, and especially for a small business,” Phoenix said. “You’ve got to reeducate the factory. There are likely to be delays. You could run into quality problems.”

Her biggest source of frustratio­n is the gnawing sense that the trade war seems not only futile but damaging. She and her husband have managed to forge a fast-growing business in Broomfield, a town of 69,000 people north of Denver. Now ill-conceived government action is menacing their success, she said.

“When you are growing fast, it’s hair on fire a lot of the time,” she said. “These tariffs are putting an enormous amount of pressure on us.”

Like many small-scale entreprene­urial ventures, Xero Shoes was born by accident, as the outgrowth of the pursuit of a solution to a personal problem. Phoenix’s husband, Steven Sashen, was a serious runner who had reached his mid-40s and was suddenly suffering injuries like pulled hamstrings.

The running world was then in the thrall of the barefoot movement, spurred by the bestsellin­g book “Born to Run,” which argued that ditching cushiony shoes would restore balance and eliminate muscle strain.

Sashen tried a pair of five-toed minimalist rubbers sneakers that were then selling like mad in response to the book. His own feet could not fit comfortabl­y, so he sought to make his own.

He ordered sheets of rubber and cut them into shoes. He bought laces from Home Depot. To save on costs, he bought materials in bulk, which left him with more shoes than he needed. An internet marketer by trade, he made a website and sold the shoes there. Demand proved intense.

Over the last four years, Xero’s sales have grown at an average annual pace of 84%, she said, reaching $8.8 million in 2018. The company employs 34 people.

It sells 90% of its footwear in the United States while shipping the rest to markets around the planet — to Japan, Singapore, Britain and the Czech Republic.

Growth had been poised to accelerate even more rapidly this year, as Xero wrapped up a test with REI, the outdoor clothing and equipment retailer, bringing an order worth $830,000 for the 2020 season.

“It’s by far our biggest order ever,” Phoenix said.

But the tariffs that hit Sept. 1 could alter the economics of that deal. Xero could presumably try to renegotiat­e a higher price with REI that would cover the tariff, but Phoenix has been reluctant to pursue that route given the importance of the relationsh­ip. Instead, she has waited and hoped that a deal between Washington and Beijing would end the threat.

The hardest part is figuring out what to do. Phoenix was contemplat­ing factories in Vietnam when Trump tweeted that could be the next country to face tariffs.

“Do we make the move to Vietnam, and then we are right back to where we started?” Phoenix said. “How do you make a decision in this sort of environmen­t?”

She has been huddling with consultant­s to explore slight design changes that could alter the classifica­tion of her products and incur lower tariffs. Substituti­ng a vegetable fiber material for synthetic webbing can lower the tariffs rate, but will the new material perform as well? These calculatio­ns matter.

So does the pursuit of finance to enable the next order, a process rendered exceptiona­lly difficult by the trade war.

“It’s been a question for every single lender,” Phoenix said. “They want to know about the tariffs and my plans.”

She was galled to learn that among the Chinese imports set to face higher tariffs is the machinery used to make shoes.

“Trump says he wants to bring manufactur­ing back to the States,” she said. “How does that work exactly?”

 ?? PHOTOS BY BENJAMIN RASMUSSEN / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Shoes are displayed at the offices of Xero Shoes in Broomfield, Colorado, last month. The trade war is pressuring U.S. companies to leave China for their manufactur­ing needs, but many say they won’t be able to move their supply chains home and are unsure where to move them.
PHOTOS BY BENJAMIN RASMUSSEN / NEW YORK TIMES Shoes are displayed at the offices of Xero Shoes in Broomfield, Colorado, last month. The trade war is pressuring U.S. companies to leave China for their manufactur­ing needs, but many say they won’t be able to move their supply chains home and are unsure where to move them.
 ??  ?? Xero Shoes co-founder Lena Phoenix has been huddling with consultant­s to explore slight design changes that could alter the classifica­tion of her products and incur lower tariffs.
Xero Shoes co-founder Lena Phoenix has been huddling with consultant­s to explore slight design changes that could alter the classifica­tion of her products and incur lower tariffs.
 ?? BENJAMIN RASMUSSEN / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Lena Phoenix and her husband, Steven Sashen, cofounders of Xero Shoes in Colorado, are mulling options to Chinese factories.
BENJAMIN RASMUSSEN / NEW YORK TIMES Lena Phoenix and her husband, Steven Sashen, cofounders of Xero Shoes in Colorado, are mulling options to Chinese factories.

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