Import cargo volume at the US’ major container ports
is expected to begin slowly climbing again this month after February saw one of
the lowest levels since the beginning of the pandemic, according to the latest
figures from the National Retail Federation's (NRF) Global Port Tracker.
The Global Port
Tracker from NRF and Hackett Associates notes that while there are
many uncertainties about the economy, import cargo volumes are expected to show
modest gains over the next several months.
“Growth is a positive sign,
but levels are still far below normal and retailers will remain cautious as
they work to keep inventories in line with consumer demand,” said Jonathan
Gold, NRF vice president for supply chain and customs policy.
“Retailers are maintaining
reduced inventories in anticipation of rebuilding with new seasonal stock once
they have a clearer take on expected levels of consumer spending,” Hackett
Associates founder Ben Hackett said. “While import volumes remain low, the
tight labour market and strong wages are helping consumers absorb the impact of
inflation and continue to spend.”
US ports covered by Global
Port Tracker handled 1.81 million Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units (TEU) – one
20-foot container or its equivalent – in January, the latest month for which final numbers are
available. That was down 16.5% year over year but up 4.4% from December for
the first month-over-month increase since last August.
Ports have not yet reported
February numbers, but Global Port Tracker projected that the month dropped to
1.56 million TEU, down 13.6% from January and down an unusually large 26.2%
from a year earlier. That would make it the slowest month since 1.53 million
TEU in May 2020, when many factories in Asia and most US stores were closed due
to the pandemic. Since the beginning of the pandemic, only the 1.51 million TEU
recorded in February 2020 and 1.37 million TEU in March 2020 have been lower.
Even without the impact of the
pandemic, February is historically the slowest month of the year because of
Lunar New Year factory shutdowns in Asia and retailers’ lull between the
holiday season and spring shopping. In February 2022, the impact of Lunar New
Year was mitigated by congestion at US ports that kept a supply of vessels
waiting to unload, resulting in an artificially large year-over-year comparison
this February.
Beginning this month, imports
are expected to climb at least through mid-summer but will nonetheless remain
below last year’s levels. March is forecast at 1.74 million TEU, down 25.9%
year over year; April at 1.87 million TEU, down 17.2%, and May at 1.92 million
TEU, down 19.7%. June is forecast at 2 million TEU, the first time imports are
expected to be that high since October but down 11.5% from last June. July is
forecast at 2.13 million TEU, down 2.5% year over year.
The first half of 2023 is
forecast at 10.9 million TEU, down 19.5% from the first half of 2022. Imports
for 2022 totalled 25.5 million TEU, down 1.2% from the annual record of 25.8
million TEU set in 2021.
By Just Style