The creative ways retailers are trying to sidestep shipping delays, from Home Depot flying in power tools to Coca-Cola chartering bulk vessels used for coal
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Grace Kay
Oct 8, 2021, 23:28 IST
ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images
A record number of container ships are causing backlogs in key US ports.
Companies like Target, Home Depot, and Coca-Cola have taken on extra costs to offset the shortages.
The supply-chain snags threaten to cause further price hikes and shutter more businesses.
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As record numbers of hulking cargo ships clog key ports and threaten the global supply chain, many retailers have been forced to find creative ways to overcome shortages and price hikes.
From chartering bulk vessels and smaller container ships to flying in products and hoarding goods, retailers have been forced to quickly pivot, scrapping traditional strategies in favor of more expensive ones, as the companies prepare for an onslaught of holiday shopping.
Last week, Coca-Cola announced it was chartering bulk shipping vessels that are usually reserved for hauling raw materials like coal, iron, and grain. The month before, Target and Costco also revealed that they had begun chartering container ships in an effort to side-step the shipping delays.
The major retailers joined Walmart, Home Depot, and Ikea in the move to take more control over the shipping process.
In August, Walmart announced during an earnings call it was chartering its own ships to prepare for the holiday shopping season. By contracting with smaller logistic management companies, retailers can have more control over the movement of their goods, but they face a hefty price tag. Chartering a vessel can cost an average of $40,000 per day for a vessel carrying 3,000 20-foot containers - a rate which can add up to be even higher than record rates of over $20,000 to ship a 20-foot container from Asia to the US, according to the Drewry World Container Index.
In August, Ikea said it was shipping goods over private vessels, as well as purchasing its own shipping containers. Earlier in the summer, Home Depot told investors it was reserving its own ships, as well as snatching up merchandise on the spot market - a buying option that can cost as much as four times pre-established contract rates.
In September, Lululemon told investors it is relying more heavily on air freight in order to avoid port congestion. Air shipments are significantly more expensive than transporting goods by sea. A $195 ocean shipment can cost $1,000 by air, according to Freightos.
Home Depot President and Chief Operating Officer Ted Decker said the company was also flying in "smaller, higher value items," like power tools, on some occasions.
Ultimately, supply-chain snags are likely to add dominance to big-box retailers, while cutting out smaller companies that don't have the extra funds to charter their own vessels or ship via cargo planes.
"Whenever we have a constrained supply like this it's always the big dogs that win," the Association for Supply Chain Management's Douglas Kent told Insider. "The smaller businesses just don't have the capital to keep up. They're already in survival mode. They're going to have to pass these costs on to customers and risk losing out to big-box retailers that can absorb the costs themselves. As a result, we will likely see the shuttering of more companies due to these ongoing issues."
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