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California Port Pileup Shatters Record And Imports Still Haven’t Peaked
Zubu Brothers ^ | 8-31-2021 | Greg Miller of FreightWaves

Posted on 08/31/2021 6:25:14 PM PDT by blam

From anchorage stats to forward arrivals, ocean bookings, and inventory-to-sales numbers, all the latest data paints the same picture: The U.S. congestion crisis has never been more severe than it is now — and it’s getting worse.

Hope for any relief this year has vanished. French carrier CMA CGM is the latest in a long line of market participants to push back its timeline on normalization. Capacity constraints “are expected to continue until the first half of 2022,” CMA CGM warned on Friday.

Alarmingly, America’s import system — which is already stretched to the limit — looks like it will have to handle even higher volumes next month. The likely outcome: Carriers will be forced to cancel more sailings as terminal berths max out and ships get stuck at anchor, even more cargo will get “rolled” (pushed to a future sailing), and importers will face even longer delays and even less slot availability as they scramble to build inventories for holiday sales.

More ships stuck at anchor than ever before

According to the Marine Exchange of Southern California, there were 47 container ships at anchor or drifting off the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach on Sunday, a new all-time high. The earlier high of 40 at anchor was set on Feb. 1 and matched several times last week. The tally rose to 44 on Friday and stood at 46 on Monday.

Pre-COVID, an average of 16 container ships were at berths or at anchor on any given day (with any ships at anchor being a rare occurrence). On Sunday, there were 76 box ships either at berths, at anchor or drifting — 4.8 times the pre-COVID level.

(Chart data: American Shipper based on data from Marine Exchange of Southern California. Data bi-monthly Jan 2019-Nov 2020; daily Dec 2020-present)

There are now almost 60% more container ships at anchor than at berth. The Marine Exchange data shows that Los Angeles/Long Beach terminals accommodated an average of 28 ships each day this month. All the rest is overflow that heads to the so-called “parking lot” in San Pedro Bay.

Automatic identification system (AIS) ship-positioning data from MarineTraffic revealed extreme congestion in Southern California on Monday, with more than a half-dozen ships forced to drift because anchorage spots were full.

Container-ship positions as of Monday afternoon (Map: MarineTraffic)

Even higher volumes on the way

“The expected spike in imports generated by the peak season and pre-shipped cargo is already here, making the operation more complex,” said Hapag-Lloyd on Friday, referring to congestion in Los Angeles and Long Beach. Hapag-Lloyd said that it does not expect California anchorages to clear in 2021.

The Port of Los Beach’s WAVE report, which estimates future arrivals, predicts volumes will rise in the weeks ahead. It forecast loaded import volumes of 120,928 twenty-foot equivalent units for the last week of September, up 34% from the estimated 89,980 TEUs of imports due to arrive next week.

Signal, the Port of Los Angeles’ planning tool, shows the same upward trend, with import volumes of 178,426 TEUs expected the week of Sept. 12-18, up 49% from an estimated 120,070 TEUs this week.

Another forward indicator is a proprietary index of shippers’ bookings on FreightWaves’ SONAR platform. The index has risen sharply in recent weeks, implying higher volumes arriving at U.S. ports in late September and into October.

Indexed to Jan. 2019; 10-day moving average of bookings as of date of departure. (Chart: FreightWaves SONAR. To learn more about FreightWaves SONAR, click here.)

Inventories not even close to being replenished

Despite record imports in the first eight months of this year, U.S. retail sales continue to outpace inventory replenishment. Assuming sales don’t collapse and businesses seek to reach pre-COVID inventory-to-sales levels, imports still have a long way to run due to restocking.

The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) produces a monthly report that includes an index of sentiment on customer inventories. That index fell to 25 points in July, the lowest level in its history.

(Chart: FreightWaves SONAR)

The Bureau of Economic Analysis publishes detailed monthly data on retail inventories and inventory-to-sales ratios. While there is a lag — the June numbers were published on Friday — the data underscores the magnitude of America’s inventory restocking challenge.

Jason Miller, associate professor of supply chain management at Michigan State University’s Eli Broad College of Business, provided inflation-adjusted BEA figures excluding motor vehicles and automotive parts (which skew the data). This data shows that retail inventories are now substantially higher than pre-COVID, but sales have been so high that the inventory-to-sales ratio is far below where it was pre-COVID. The level of inventory to sales actually fell slightly in June, to 0.94 months of sales.

(Chart: Jason Miller)

Miller also compared the June sales and inventory figures for specific categories of wholesale and retail imports.

(Chart: Jason Miller)

The rise in sales far outpaced the rise in inventories — in some categories, inventories fell — which helps explain the ongoing flood of cargo into U.S. ports and the unprecedented pileup of ships at anchor off Los Angeles/Long Beach.


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: beltandroad; california; ccp; china; pileup; shipping; ships; supplychain; trade
Record Number Of Container Ships Waiting Off California Coast
1 posted on 08/31/2021 6:25:14 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

Maybe we’ll start making things in America.

Just kidding. Carry on.


2 posted on 08/31/2021 6:29:03 PM PDT by Celerity
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To: blam

A serious challenge: Can you just one month without buying something made in Communist China?


3 posted on 08/31/2021 6:29:56 PM PDT by samadams2000 (Get your houses in order.)
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To: blam

Need new ports on west coast. cali no longer reliable. go thru canada?


4 posted on 08/31/2021 6:29:57 PM PDT by kvanbrunt2
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To: blam

Okay. How bout a little ingenuity here? How can these ships be offloaded while anchored in the harbors?


5 posted on 08/31/2021 6:30:14 PM PDT by GSWarrior
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To: blam

And this is the new global market that is so great.


6 posted on 08/31/2021 6:30:54 PM PDT by kvanbrunt2
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To: blam

Democrats are measuring our economy by consumption, not production. What happens when it cannot consume?


7 posted on 08/31/2021 6:36:30 PM PDT by rellic
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To: samadams2000

Yes.


8 posted on 08/31/2021 6:37:29 PM PDT by rellic
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To: blam; Pollard

Weird coincidence .... Costco and Sams have recently begun limiting TP to one/order, again.

Why?

Isn’t TP made here?

Maybe the ‘components’ are not?


9 posted on 08/31/2021 6:40:11 PM PDT by Jane Long (America, Bless God....blessed be the Nation.)
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To: GSWarrior

Of course they can-barges come along side and if the container ship has its own gear to unload containers, they can be loaded onto barges and the barges moved to areas of less congestion.


10 posted on 08/31/2021 6:41:00 PM PDT by Maine Mariner
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To: blam

I sure wouldn’t want to be piloting a ship in those waters.


11 posted on 08/31/2021 6:54:07 PM PDT by PerConPat (A politician is an animal which can sit on a fence and yet keep both ears to the ground - Mencken)
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To: blam

Should have built the bridge-tunnel Russia to Alaska and the necessary RR infrastructure from Alaska to the lower U.S. many years ago...

Freight trains from EU, China, and the sub-continent would have avoided this containership problem and lowered the transportation costs...

We could have let someone form Alaska able to see Russia from her front porch be in charge of collecting the tolls...


12 posted on 08/31/2021 7:00:47 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is another Sam Adams now that we desperately need him?)
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To: GSWarrior

Unfortunately no. The unions, government and politicians have created a stranglehold for purposes such as this. Their interests are not served by solving this problem. It’s their golden opportunity.


13 posted on 08/31/2021 8:22:43 PM PDT by samadams2000 (Get your houses in order.)
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To: blam

We used to make all that stuff right here in the good old U.S.A. But then we weren’t paying people to not work.


14 posted on 08/31/2021 9:03:41 PM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: Celerity

Indeed the one thing taxes can end.


15 posted on 09/01/2021 9:16:15 AM PDT by Vaduz (women and children to be impacIQ of chimpsted the most.)
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