U.S. importers turn to prayer and the President ahead of West Coast port
labor talks
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[May 10, 2022] By
Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - For more than two
years, Isaac Larian has used every available tool to overcome global
supply-chain bottlenecks and keep retailers stocked with enough Bratz
and LOL Surprise! dolls to meet pandemic demand. Asked how he's
preparing for this summer's West Coast port labor talks, the chief
executive of Los Angeles-based MGA Entertainment deadpanned, "I'm
praying two times a day." Larian and a half-dozen suppliers for major
retailers like Walmart, Amazon.com and Target told Reuters that COVID-related
ocean shipping snafus have exhausted the workarounds they'd use in the
event that talks between 22,000 workers and employers at 29 West Coast
ports hit an impasse after their contract expires on July 1.
The International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) and the Pacific
Maritime Association (PMA) employer group will meet for the first time
on Tuesday.
Any deadlock could delay or halt shipments at the No. 1 U.S. seaport in
Los Angeles/Long Beach and other Pacific coast gateways that handle
58.1% of goods from the Far East. That would "hurt the already fragile
U.S. economy even more," said Larian, who is among the importers calling
on the White House to intercede - as it has in the past.
The talks come at a critical time for suppliers and retailers because
seasonal Christmas merchandise will start hitting U.S. ports in June.
"Chaos is the new normal," said Jay Foreman, CEO of Tonka Truck and My
Little Pony seller Basic Fun!
Efforts to sidestep shipping snarls only added to delays, costs and
headaches, he said.
When the pandemic-fueled surge in cargo overwhelmed the Los Angeles/Long
Beach ports, importers rerouted goods - spreading backups other U.S.
ocean cargo gateways like Houston, Charleston and New York. That shift
contributed to a year-over-year West Coast market share loss of 4.6% to
ports on the Eastern Seaboard and Gulf Coast in January and February,
according to data from Xeneta and Container Trades Statistics. Importers
said distance as well as border and infrastructure hurdles knock ports
in Canada and Mexico out of contention for many shippers. Pricey air
transport is an option for some shippers, but airport cargo facilities
jam up when demand spikes.
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Crude tankers are shown at the port of Long Beach, California, U.S.,
March 8, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Blake
So, suppliers like Mattel, MGA and Basic Fun! are racing in goods as fast as
they can. Barbie and Hot Wheels maker Mattel's inventory jumped 55% year-on-year
to $969 million for the quarter ended March 31. Larian, MGA's CEO, plans to
import about 40% of this year's remaining 4,700 40-foot containers two to three
months earlier than usual. But new COVID lockdowns in China are throwing a
wrench in those plans, slowing the movement goods at major Chinese ports and
miring hundreds of MGA containers in the mess.
Parties on both sides of the contract negotiations say they are invested in
keeping West Coast ports open and thriving - though they differ on key issues.
The PMA represents employers like Mediterranean Shipping Co (MSC) and Maersk,
which have been booking historic profits and are keen to use automation to speed
up cargo processing. Dockworkers represented by ILWU - one of the nation's most
powerful - kept ports running even as some workers lost their lives to COVID.
They want to protect jobs.
While there hasn't been an ILWU strike during coast-wide talks since 1971, talks
are always contentious. There have been labor slowdowns or shutdowns during
every negotiation going back to the 1990s, said Peter Tirschwell, a vice
president at S&P Global Market Intelligence. President Barack Obama dispatched
his labor secretary to help hammer out a deal in 2015, when the previous talks
broke down and dockworkers stopped work for 8 days - sapping an estimated $8
billion from the Southern California economy and clogging U.S. transportation
lanes.
The ports have been on President Joe Biden's radar for months as shipping delays
stoke inflation that is fueling voter discontent ahead of the mid-term elections
in November. Biden formed a supply chain task force and has been sending his
labor secretary to port meetings up and down the West Coast.
"I stand ready to help facilitate productive conversations that result in the
best outcome for workers and our economy," U.S. Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said
in a statement.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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