There are not terribly many places in the media covering this very important news.
Retailers
scramble as shipper bankruptcy puts goods in limbo
1
September, 2016
NEW
YORK (AP) — Some major retailers are scrambling to work out
contingency plans to get their merchandise to stores as the
bankruptcy of the Hanjin shipping line has thrown ports and retailers
around the world into confusion.
They
don't have a lot of time. Giant container ships from the South
Korean-based Hanjin shipping line are marooned with their cargo of
what experts say are lots of TVs and printers, but also loads of home
furnishings and clothing.
Hanjin,
the world's seventh-largest container shipper, filed for bankruptcy
protection Wednesday and stopped accepting new cargo. With its assets
being frozen, ships from China to Canada were refused permission to
offload or take aboard containers because there were no guarantees
that tugboat pilots or stevedores would be paid. It's also been a
factor in shipping rates rising and could hurt some trucking firms
with contracts to pick up goods from Hanjin ships.
The
South Korean giant represents nearly 8 percent of the trans-Pacific
trade volume for the U.S. market. While some retailers may already
have merchandise for the holiday season affected, experts say what's
most important is that the issue be resolved before the critical
shipping month of October.
"Retailers
always have robust contingency plans, but this degree of uncertainty
is making it challenging to put those plans in place," said
Jessica Dankert, senior director of retail operations for the Retail
Industry Leaders Association, a trade alliance with members including
companies like Best Buy, Wal-Mart and Target.
J.C.
Penney said Hanjin is one of several ocean freight carriers that it
uses and when it learned there might be an issue it began to divert
and reroute its containers. It said it uses "a variety of
transportation methods and ports" and right now does not expect
a significant effect on the flow of merchandise.
Target
Corp. said it is watching the situation closely and Wal-Mart said it
is waiting for details about Hanjin's bankruptcy proceedings and the
implications to its merchandise before it could assess the effect.
As
of Friday, 27 ships had been refused entry to ports or terminals,
said Hanjin Shipping spokesman Park Min. The Seoul-based company said
one ship in Singapore had been seized by the ship's owner.
At
the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the nation's busiest port
complex, three Hanjin container ships ranging from about 700 feet to
1,100 feet (213 meters to 304 meters) long were either drifting
offshore or anchored away from terminals on Thursday. A fourth vessel
that was supposed to leave Long Beach on Thursday morning remained
anchored inside the breakwater.
"Hanjin
called us and said: 'We're going bankrupt and we can't pay any bills
— so don't bother asking,' " said J. Kip Louttit, executive
director of the Marine Exchange of Southern California, which
provides traffic control for the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.
That's
meant cargo headed to and from Asia is in limbo, much to the distress
of merchants looking to stock shelves with fall fashions or Christmas
toys.
"Someone from the garment industry called earlier today
asking: 'How long is this going to go on, because I've got clothing
out there,'" Louttit said.
Chris
Rogers, a research analyst at Panjiva, which tracks international
imports to the United States, said the situation isn't yet dire but
could become so. October is the busiest month for cargo from South
Korea to the U.S., accounting for about 11.5 percent of the annual
total.
But
South Korea's maritime ministry said Hanjin's troubles would affect
cargo exports for two to three months, given that August-October is a
high-demand season for deep-sea routes.
The
Retail Industry Leaders Association wrote to U.S. Secretary of
Commerce Penny Pritzker and Federal Maritime Commission Chairman
Mario Cordero on Thursday, urging them to work with the South Korean
government, ports and others to prevent disruptions. It said the
bankruptcy is rippling through the global supply chain and could
cause significant harm to consumers and the U.S. economy.
"There
(are) millions of dollars' worth of merchandise that needs to be on
store shelves that could be impacted by this," said Jonathan
Gold, the National Retail Federation's vice president for supply
chain and customs policy.
The
confusion might also sink some trucking firms that contract with
Hanjin to deliver cargo containers from ports to company loading
bays. "They've got bills to pay — they could literally close
their doors over this," said Peter Schneider, Fresno-based vice
president of T.G.S. Transportation Inc.
Other
shipping lines may take on some of Hanjin's traffic — but at a
price. Since many vessels already are operating at high capacity,
shippers may wind up paying a premium to squeeze their containers on
board, said Jock O'Connell, international trade adviser to Los
Angeles-based Beacon Economics.
The
price of shipping a 40-foot container from China to the U.S. jumped
up to 50 percent in a single day, said Nerijus Poskus, director of
pricing and procurement for Flexport, a licensed freight forwarder
and customs broker based in San Francisco.
The
price from China to West Coast ports rose from $1,100 per container
to as much as $1,700 on Thursday, while the cost from China to the
East Coast jumped from $1,700 to $2,400, he said. Hanjin's bankruptcy
was a major factor, he said.
Global
demand and trade have suffered since the 2008 recession, but
steamship lines continued to build more and larger vessels. That
weaker trade and overcapacity have sent ocean shipping rates plunging
in recent years. A few months ago, Poskus said, prices hit historic
lows globally — down to as much as $600 per container from Shanghai
to Los Angeles. That wouldn't even cover fuel costs for the huge
ships, he said.
Poskus
expects the spike in prices to last a month or two. With about 5
percent of ships in the global trading fleet sitting idle, he
believes there is room to take over Hanjin's capacity and carriers
already are discussing the possibility of adding ships. But he said
prices would have to rise in order to be sustainable.
The bankruptcy of the Hanjin shipping line has thrown ports and retailers around the world into confusion, with giant container ships marooned and merchants worrying whether tons of goods will reach their shelves.
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