Toronto Star

OUT TO SEA

Ralph Lauren, Hugo Boss and Nike products left adrift in wake of shipper’s collapse,

- NGUYEN DIEU TU UYEN, KYUNGHEE PARK AND MAI NGOC CHAU BLOOMBERG

Suppliers to companies from Nike to Hugo Boss are scrambling to ensure their T-shirts and sneakers reach buyers in time for the year-end holiday season after the collapse of Hanjin Shipping Co. left an estimated $14-billion’s (U.S.) worth of goods adrift.

Esquel Group, a Hong Kong-based manufactur­er for fashion brands including Nike, Hugo Boss and Ralph Lauren, is hiring truckers to move four stranded containers of raw materials to its factories near Ho Chi Minh City as soon as they can be retrieved from ports in China. Liaoning Shidai Wanheng Co., a Chinese fabrics importer and a supplier to Marks & Spencer Group, has made alternativ­e arrangemen­ts for shipments that were scheduled with Hanjin.

“Our production lines are waiting,” said Kent Teh, who runs Esquel’s Vietnam business. “We potentiall­y have to take airfreight to deliver the garment items to clients in the U.S. and U.K.”

Besides apparels, handbags, television­s and microwave ovens are among goods stranded at sea after Korea’s largest shipping company filed for bankruptcy protection last week, setting off a series of events that roiled the global supply chain. A U.S. court on Tuesday provided a temporary reprieve, which may help vessels call on ports such as Los An- geles without the fear of getting impounded. Any major bottleneck­s ahead of Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas could put a dent in the twomonth shopping season, which netted some $626 billion of sales last year in the U.S.

Supporting Hanjin’s Chapter15 U.S. Bankruptcy Court petition, Samsung Electronic­s Co. said in a court filing that about $38 million of its goods were on board two Hanjin vessels off Long Beach, Calif. Its visual display business division has parts and finished goods in 304 containers meant for its factory in Mexico, while its home appliance business unit has refrigerat­ors, washing machines, dishwasher­s and microwave ovens in 312 containers.

If the cargo isn’t unloaded immediatel­y, the company will be forced to transport alternativ­e parts by air to help meet contractua­l obligation­s at “great costs,” Samsung said. For example, it would have to charter at least 16 planes at a cost of about $8.8 million to move1,469 tons of goods, it said.

“All these costs and delays will be a loss not only to Samsung, but also to major retailers in the U.S. and, ultimately, to U.S. consumers,” Samsung said in the filing.

As parent Hanjin Group and the South Korean government consider steps to salvage the shipping company, retailers in the U.S. last week called for measures to help temper losses. About 86 of Hanjin’s ships were stuck at 50 ports in 26 countries, with vessels turned away out of concern the company has no cash to pay various docking fees and handling charges. A favourable ruling from a U.S. bankruptcy court this week protected Hanjin’s assets in the U.S. against creditors, while the shipping line proceeds with its reorganiza­tion in South Korea.

With cargo stuck on ships, Esquel’s Teh estimates a production delay of about a week and a doubling of transport costs. Besides truckers, a faster ship will be hired to transport the items from Hong Kong, he said. He also plans to fly finished products out of his factories to meet deadlines. Some manufactur­ers are switching to other shippers, said Hoang Ngoc Anh, deputy secretary general of Vietnam Textile and Apparel Associatio­n.

Over in China, Shanghai Lansheng Corp., which exports shoes, office supplies and musical instrument­s, said it is asking each of its business divisions to check if they have any stock stuck at sea. Nike and Ralph Lauren declined to comment, while Hugo Boss didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comments.

“Retailers’ main concern is that there’s millions of dollars worth of merchandis­e that needs to be on store shelves that could be impacted by this,” Jonathan Gold, vice-president for supply chain and customs policy at the National Retail Federation trade group, said last week. Another group, the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, urged U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker and Federal Maritime Commission chairman Mario Cordero to intervene.

In last-ditch efforts to pull the shipping company back from the brink, Hanjin Group said Tuesday it will provide100 billion won ($92 million U.S.), including 40 billion won from Chairman Cho Yang Ho, to help contain disruption­s in the supply chain. Separately, South Korea’s ruling Saenuri Party asked the government to offer about 100 billion won of low-interest loans if the group provides collateral.

Hanjin Shipping, filed for bankruptcy protection last week after its proposal for restructur­ing failed to pass muster with lenders led by state-owned Korea Developmen­t Bank.

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 ?? REUTERS FILE PHOTO ?? The global supply chain was rocked after Korea’s largest shipper filed for bankruptcy protection last week.
REUTERS FILE PHOTO The global supply chain was rocked after Korea’s largest shipper filed for bankruptcy protection last week.

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