Analysis-U.S. retailers may pay the price for 'extended' holiday return
season
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[December 29, 2021] By
Siddharth Cavale and Arriana McLymore
(Reuters) - Major U.S. retailers' longer
return policies, launched during the pandemic this year to lure
consumers, could leave them facing much higher costs if shoppers bring
back a record-setting $112 billion in gifts bought during the extended
holiday shopping season.
Retailers entered the 2021 holiday season facing a supply-chain logjam,
with inventories at lows unseen since 1992.
Many began Christmas promotions as early as September, to spread out the
impact caused by shipping- and labor-related shortages over more months
than the traditional peak shopping days between Thanksgiving and
Christmas.
Retailers also lured shoppers with "extended" return policies. Apple
Inc, Saks Fifth Avenue and Nike are among chains allowing shoppers to
return holiday purchases after 60 or 90 days, rather than the industry
standard of 30 days.
But this extended return process, which can include shipping costs,
cleaning fees and repackaging, can drive higher costs for retailers and
weigh heavily on profit margins.
With global supply-chain snarls not expected to ease until at least
2023, the "returns" problem is not expected to go away soon.
"The returns problem is likely to be a big focus area in the coming two
years, since the costs associated with the activity are bound to impact
earnings ... significantly," RSR Research analyst Brian Kilcourse said
in an email.
U.S. shoppers are expected to return a record $112 billion to $114
billion worth of merchandise in coming weeks, representing a 24% to 27%
increase over 2019 post-holiday returns, according to B-Stock Solutions,
which manages online liquidation sites for retailers including Walmart
Inc, Costco Wholesale Corp and Best Buy Co Inc .
Of that, between $43 billion and $45 billion in returns are likely to be
merchandise purchased online, B-Stock said.
According to the National Retail Federation, a trade group, consumers
returned an estimated 10.6% of goods purchased at U.S. retail in 2020.
That percentage is estimated to have risen 13.3% during the holiday
season, costing retailers $101 billion.
Optoro, which works with retailers and manufacturers to manage and
resell returned merchandise, said it expects shoppers to return $120
billion in goods between Thanksgiving and Jan. 31.
While longer return windows may not directly add to retailers' expenses,
it does impact their ability to use working capital for other things,
said Paula Rosenblum, managing partner at retail research firm RSR
Research. "It's an unknown payable."
Retailers do not usually break out return rates or related expenses, but
signs are emerging that the wave of returns started much before
Christmas this year as consumers started shopping sooner, leading to
higher costs because of the longer grace period, according to some
retailers.
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People carrying shopping bags walk inside the King of Prussia
shopping mall, as shoppers show up early for the Black Friday sales,
in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, U.S. November 26, 2021.
REUTERS/Rachel Wisniewski
Over the past six weeks, privately owned office supplies retailer Staples has
seen a 30% increase in drop-offs and returns, said Craig Grayson, vice president
of general merchandise management.
UK-based online fashion retailer Boohoo said UK return rates its quarter ending
Nov. 30 were already 12.5 percentage points higher than the same period last
year and 7 percentage points higher than pre-pandemic levels. Those higher rates
and related logistic costs led it to cut its annual margins forecast twice in
the past four months..
'LIVING IN A RATS' NEST'
Consider a sweater priced at $100. Most retailers' margin on the sweater could
be $33 if a shopper purchased it in-store, but only $17 if bought online and
shipped to the customer's home from a store, according to an AlixPartners report
from May 2020.
If a customer returns the sweater to the store and it is not resold, the
retailer loses $25 in margin. The lost margin spikes to $31 if it had to collect
the online purchase and return it from a customer's home to a distribution
center, according to the report that reviewed returns policies of retailers
including Walmart, Amazon.com, Macy's, Aldi and Kroger.
And with online shopping growing, retailers have boosted orders to account for
items not available because they are in transit or sitting unsold in stores,
Rosenblum said. But further exacerbating the problem is the risk of all that
excess inventory also going unsold.
"We are living in a rats' nest at the moment, and it’s really hard to untangle
what’s going to happen," she said.
Apple CEO Tim Cook told Reuters the impact of supply-chain disruptions would be
worse this holiday season as persistent shortages of software chips were
affecting "most of its products," leading the iPhone maker to fall short of
demand by more than $6 billion.
Apple introduced a policy this year allowing customers up to 68 days to return a
product, instead of 30 days.
Similarly, Nordstrom Inc's Nordstrom Rack has extended its return policies on
many products to 45 days, Nike to 60 days and Macy's, Walmart and Saks Fifth
Avenue to as much as 90 days.
(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale in Bengaluru and Arriana McLymore in New York;
Additional reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Ben Klayman
and Matthew Lewis)
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