Gulf Today

Container shipping sector faces slump as pandemic hits retailers

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LONDON: The $1 trillion container shipping industry is facing a major slowdown. Some shipping lines, whose retail customers are being hammered by the coronaviru­s pandemic, are reducing sailing speed and taking longer routes around Africa, avoiding Suez Canal passage fees, according to the companies and ship-tracking specialist­s.

Many are also cutting down the number of voyages and providing short-term storage for clients as the industry, which includes heavyweigh­ts like Maersk, MSC and Hapag-lloyd, faces its biggest downturn since the 2008 financial crisis.

The new tactics not only save on costs, but also help adapt to the needs of cash-crunched retailers - among their biggest customers - who are stuck with huge inventory surpluses thanks to COVID-19 store closures and a collapse in consumer demand.

Slower shipping times also means importers can delay payments made on delivery.

From sportswear maker Puma to mall stalwart Gap, many retailers have been forced to reduce or slow down shipments of new merchandis­e. Civil unrest in the United States has compounded their problems by further clouding the prospect for a recovery in the world’s biggest retail sales market.

Puma’s Chief Executive Bjorn Gulden, for example, said it was managing some of its excess inventory by stowing it on slow-going ships as stores in the United States and Europe tentativel­y reopen.

However, at the same time, the shipping slowdown has created headaches for those retailers, from Walmart and Amazon to shoe seller Rothy’s, who have never stopped selling products to homebound consumers, ranging from books and shoes to exercise equipment, much of it sold online.

Now those retailers are fighting for space on the fewer, faster-moving ships on the high seas.

“What we are seeing is quite a mixed situation from cargo owners, some of which are resuming normal shipment of their cargoes, others are requesting routings via longer transit times,” said Marcus Leaver, chief operating officer of sea freight at Hellmann Worldwide Logistics, which organizes shipments for companies such as retailers.

A lack of space on ships is leading to more “rollovers”, where containers are bumped from packed vessels to later ones, like passengers on oversold flights, according to importers.

Spanish retailer Mango, which has continued to sell online during the pandemic, told Reuters it was seeing an increase in service cancellati­ons by shipping companies, which caused instabilit­y and “space problems”.

It added that 99% of its imports from Asia were now coming by sea because air costs had gone up due to a lack of flights and the priority given to medical equipment.

 ?? Reuters ?? A container ship leaves the Port of Southampto­n in Britain.
Reuters A container ship leaves the Port of Southampto­n in Britain.

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