US retailer holiday orders should boost transport demand, but risks loom
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[May 24, 2023] By
Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The slumping U.S. transportation sector could be
bouncing off a bottom as retailers start preparing for the
back-to-school season and winter holidays, but political brinkmanship in
Washington and interest rate hikes could threaten long-term consumer
demand, economists and supply chain executives said.
Retailers like Walmart and Target have largely tackled bloated unsold
inventories and are taking steps to restock, transportation executives
said. That activity is being closely monitored because consumer spending
accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity and fuels
significant transportation demand.
Ships, planes, trucks and railroads that move goods sold by retailers
enjoyed a boom early in the COVID-19 pandemic as people sheltered at
home.
But much of that demand evaporated when restrictions lifted and
consumers resumed travel and indoor dining last spring. Retailers, stuck
with too much merchandise, stopped ordering - sending transportation
rates swooning and leaving providers with too much capacity.
Some say that downward trend could start to reverse in 2023 for
transporters.
Retailers have already placed holiday orders this year, said Jack
Kleinhenz, chief economist for the National Retail Federation (NRF)
industry group.
Wholesalers and retailers are "continuing to be very conservative with
inventory," said Greg Javor, senior vice president of global supply
chain operations for Mattel, seller of Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels toy
cars.
"We expect things to be normal ... in the second half of the year with
the inventory corrections pretty much behind us," Javor said at the
Reuters Events supply chain conference in Chicago last week.
Retail orders are filled by factories and then shipped to buyers,
creating a time lag of weeks to months. The typical peak season for
container imports is in the autumn, due to holiday orders, but has
occurred earlier during the pandemic.
Even so, U.S. imports already have returned to pre-pandemic levels,
bolstering hopes for a transportation uptick in the second half of 2023.
"The biggest piece that we're watching right now is, 'What is going to
happen with consumer demand and how does that end up?'," said Drew
Wilkerson, CEO of freight brokerage RXO.
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Transport trucks from Mexico cross into
the United States at the Otay Mesa border crossing in San Diego,
California, U.S. May 31, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake/
WORRIES REMAIN
Indeed, glimmers of good news are tempered by ongoing worries about
a standoff over raising the federal government's borrowing cap and
the U.S. Federal Reserve's efforts to tamp down inflation with
interest rate hikes.
U.S. consumer sentiment slumped to a six-month low earlier this
month. And Federal Reserve officials have signaled they expect
interest rates to stay high or go higher, given sticky inflation -
dashing investor hopes for a rate cut.
"The problem is that the longer higher inflation sticks around, the
longer people expect it to remain," NRF's Kleinhenz said.
The American Association of Port Authorities (AAPA) earlier this
month called out demand risks in general retail merchandise and
household durable goods, which account for more than half of U.S.
ocean imports.
While general merchandise stores are unlikely to be aggressive about
ordering, the real estate sector that brings in appliances,
furniture, tiling, floor covers and other goods for new homes is
being pummeled by rising interest rates, AAPA said.
Still, DHL Express Americas CEO Mike Parra is betting U.S. consumers
will remain resilient and he feels "optimistic" about year-end
activity.
Still, Parra will be watching retail restocking in August, September
and October. "That is the indicator for me as to what's going to
happen in quarter four," Parra said.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles, editing by Deepa
Babington)
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