America's biggest warehouse is running out of room. It's about to get
worse
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[August 02, 2022] By
Lisa Baertlein
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (Reuters) -
America's largest warehouse market is full as major U.S. retailers warn
of slowing sales of the clothing, electronics, furniture and other goods
that have packed the distribution centers east of Los Angeles.
The merchandise keeps flooding in from across the Pacific, and for one
of the busiest U.S. warehouse complexes, things are about to get worse.
Experts have warned the U.S. supply chain would get hit by the "bullwhip
effect" if companies panic-ordered goods to keep shelves full and got
caught out by a downturn in demand while shipments were still arriving
from Asia.
In the largest U.S. warehouse and distribution market - stretching east
from Los Angeles to the area known as the "Inland Empire" – that moment
appears to have arrived.
"We're feeling the sting of the bullwhip," said Alan Amling, a
supply-chain professor at the University of Tennessee.
The sprawl of Inland Empire warehouses centered in Riverside and San
Bernardino counties grew quickly in recent years to handle surging
demand and goods imported from Asia.
That booming area, visible from space, anchors an industrial corridor
encompassing 1.6 billion square feet of storage space that extends from
the busiest U.S. seaport in Los Angeles to near the Arizona and Nevada
borders. That much storage space is nearly 44 times larger than New York
City's Central Park and 160 times bigger than Tesla Inc's new
Gigafactory in Texas.
But a consumer spending pullback now threatens to swamp warehouses here
and around the country with more goods than they can handle - worsening
supply-chain snarls that have stoked inflation. Retailers left holding
unwanted goods are faced with the choice of paying more money to store
them or denting profits by selling them at discount.
Inland Empire warehouse vacancies are among the lowest in the nation,
running at a record 0.6% versus the national average of 3.1%, according
to real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield. [graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/3oHaiXu]
GRAPHIC: No room in the Empire (https://graphics.reuters.com/SUPPLY-CHAIN/egpbkxrxzvq/chart.png)
The market is poised to get even tighter as shoppers at Walmart, Best
Buy and other retailers retreat from early COVID-era spending binges.
BINGE TO BACKLOG
While U.S. consumer spending remains above pre-pandemic levels,
retailers and suppliers are raising alarms about backlogs in categories
that have fallen out of fashion as consumers catch up on travel and
struggle with the highest inflation in 40 years.
Last week, Walmart said surging food and fuel prices left its
lower-income customers with less cash to spend on goods, and Best Buy
said shoppers were curbing spending on discretionary products like
computers and televisions. Those cautionary signals followed Target
Corp's alert that it was saddled with too many TVs, kitchen appliances,
furniture and clothes.
Suppliers - ranging from barbecue grill maker Weber Inc to Helen of Troy
Ltd, a consumer brands conglomerate that includes OXO kitchen tools -
also have warned of slowing demand and an urgent need to clear
inventories.
While the U.S. economy was downshifting, goods kept pouring in at
near-record levels.
Imports to U.S. container ports that process retail goods from China and
other countries jumped more than 26% in the first half of 2022 from
pre-pandemic levels, according to Descartes Datamyne. Christmas
shipments and the reopening of major Chinese factory hubs could goose
volumes further.
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Chunker Chief Executive Brad Wright poses in the former Sears anchor
store at Inland Center Mall in San Bernardino, California, U.S., May
18, 2022. REUTERS/Lisa Baertlein
Meanwhile, cargo keeps flooding in to the busiest U.S. seaport complex at Los
Angeles/Long Beach. During the first half of this year, dockworkers there
handled about 550,000 more 40-foot containers than before the pandemic started,
according to port data.
Christmas toys and winter holiday decor landed on those docks in July, along
with some patio furniture for Walmart and stretch pants, jeans and shoes for
Target, said Steve Ferreira, CEO of Ocean Audit, which scrutinizes marine
shipping invoices.
Retailers ordered most of those goods months ago and many are destined for the
Inland Empire's already jam-packed warehouses.
"It's a domino effect. Now the inventory is going to really build up," said
Scott Weiss, a vice president at Performance Team, a Maersk company with 22
warehouses in greater Los Angeles.
Demand for space in the Inland Empire is so intense that when 100,000 to 200,000
square feet of space frees up, it "gets gobbled up in a second," said Weiss.
SEARS AND PARKING LOTS
Investors have almost 40 million square feet under construction in the Inland
Empire - including Amazon.com Inc's biggest-ever warehouse - and at least 38% is
spoken for, said Dain Fedora, vice president of research for Southern California
at Newmark, a commercial real estate advisory firm.
While Amazon's 4.1 million square-foot facility rises on former dairy land in
the city of Ontario, the online retailer has been shelving construction plans in
other parts of the country.
Amazon is the biggest warehouse tenant in the Inland Empire and the nation. Its
decision to scale back on building, coupled with rising interest rates and the
slowing economy, is sidelining other would-be Inland Empire warehouse builders,
area real estate brokers and economists told Reuters.
Meanwhile, the scramble for space continues.
Trucking company yards and spare lots around the region have already been
converted to makeshift container storage, so entrepreneurs are marketing vacant
stores as last-resort warehouses in waiting.
Brad Wright is CEO of Chunker, which bills itself as an AirBNB for warehouses,
and works with everyone from state officials to the owners of vacated big-box
stores to find new places to stash goods.
During a recent tour at the former Sears anchor store in San Bernardino's Inland
Center mall, Wright and a potential tenant strolled past collapsed ceiling
tiles, sagging wall panels and idled escalators while working out how forklifts
would navigate the abandoned space. Wright sees the empty stores as one answer
to easing the log jams.
"There's a lot of them sitting around, and they're in good locations," he said.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by Siddharth
Cavale in New York; Editing by Kevin Krolicki, Ben Klayman and Matthew Lewis)
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