After a record-setting spring, imports at major
US container ports are expected to slow significantly for the remainder of the
year but 2022 should still see a net gain over 2021, according to the monthly
Global Port Tracker report released by the National Retail Federation (NRF) and
Hackett Associates.
“Retail sales are still growing, but the economy is
slowing down and that is reflected in cargo imports,” says NRF vice president
for supply chain and customs policy, Jonathan Gold. “Lower volumes may help
ease congestion at some ports, but others are still seeing backups and global
supply chain challenges are far from over. Our biggest concern is the potential
for disruption because of separate labour negotiations at the West Coast ports
and the freight railroads. Concluding both sets of negotiations without
disruption is critical as the important holiday season approaches.”
The contract between the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the
Pacific Maritime Association expired 1 July, and many retailers brought in
cargo early and shifted to East and Gulf Coast ports to avoid any potential
disruptions related to contract negotiations, with early shipments helping
drive second-quarter volumes. The freight railroads and their union are now
working with a Presidential Emergency Board to resolve their contract
discussions, which have been ongoing for two years. In addition, the Port of
Oakland was briefly shut down in late July amid protests by independent
truckers over a new state law aimed at eliminating independent owner-operators.
“The heady days of growth in imports are quickly receding,” Hackett
Associates founder Ben Hackett adds. “The outlook is for a decline in volumes
compared with 2021 over the next few months, and the decline is expected to
deepen in 2023.”
US ports covered by Global Port Tracker handled 2.25m
Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units (TEU) – one 20-foot container or its equivalent –
in June, the latest month for which final numbers are available. That was down
5.9% from May’s 2.4m TEU – the largest number of containers imported in a
single month since NRF began tracking imports in 2002 – but up 4.9% year over
year.
June’s results brought the first half of the year to 13.5m TEU, a 5.5%
increase year over year.
Ports have not yet reported July’s numbers, but Global Port Tracker
projected the month at 2.26m TEU, up 3.2% year over year. August is forecast at
2.2m TEU, down 3%; September at 2.15m TEU, up 0.4%; October at 2.13mTEU, down
3.9%; November at 2.06m TEU, down 2.7%, and December at 2.03m TEU, down 3%.
Those numbers would bring the second half of the year to
12.8m TEU, down 1.5% from the same period last year. But 2022 overall is
expected to total 26.3m TEU, up 2% from last year’s annual record of 25.8m TEU.
The cargo data comes as NRF continues to forecast that 2022 retail sales
will grow between 6-8% over 2021. Sales were up 7% during the first half of the
year.
Meanwhile, the latest figures
from the Office of Textiles and Apparel (OTEXA) suggest large-scale
suppliers in the wider Asian region are the biggest winners as US fashion
companies continue to diversify apparel sourcing away from China.
By Just Style