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Xi’s Lockdowns Will Pull The Rug Out From Under US Truckers This Summer
Zubu Brothers ^ | 5-3-2022 | Craig Fuller, CEO of FreightWaves

Posted on 05/03/2022 6:03:26 AM PDT by blam

Whenever the trucking market slows, truck drivers look for someone to blame. Normally, a slowdown is just a function of supply and demand. The market has too much dispatchable capacity compared to the total number of loads on any given day.

This summer, the trucking market could have one of its steepest declines in recent years and there is an entity that deserves much of the blame – the Chinese Communist Party and its draconian and inhumane lockdowns.

A Chinese containership. (Photo: ship-technology.com)

While the motivations of the Chinese government are unclear, one thing is certain – anyone subjected to a Chinese state lockdown compares it to being imprisoned in their own homes. As seen in several widely shared media posts, the Chinese government has started to erect metal barricades to block people from leaving their homes, preventing passage even for food or medicine.

While Americans watch in horror as innocent Chinese citizens are caught up in an ill-conceived, reckless, or nefarious – take your pick – act by the Chinese Communist Party, there is little Americans can do about it. But like most geopolitical events these days, the lockdowns in Shanghai and other Chinese cities are also a supply chain story that will have a dramatic effect on domestic freight markets.

The recent slowdown in U.S. truckload markets is likely a precursor to a steeper decline in the coming weeks. The lockdowns in China were not a factor in slowing U.S. truckload volumes in February and March, as evidenced by record container imports at nearly all major U.S. ports.

But that shouldn’t give anyone comfort because the slowdown is about to hit U.S. ports – and the trucking companies that service them – in a dramatic way. FreightWaves estimates that container imports from China represent approximately 16% of U.S. truckload volumes and an even larger percentage of U.S. dry van truckloads. After all, nearly half of the containers that come into the United States originate in China.

The lockdowns in Shanghai began on April 2 and the lockdowns in Guangzhou began on April 11. As geopolitical analyst Peter Zeihan described the situation on Twitter:

Beijing, which is the political capital of China, was expected to be spared the lockdowns by many analysts. This appears to be wishful thinking and Twitter lit up on April 24 with reports of Chinese state police starting to implement similar measures to those seen in the preparation for lockdowns in other cities.

The three largest cities in China are going to be removed from the world market. According to analysts, at least 40% of China’s GDP has been taken offline and this was before lockdowns began in Beijing. The vast majority of this GDP is directly related to global manufacturing. Removing it means removing the flow of containers from the world economy.

Container volumes from China to the United States started to fall on April 6. It hasn’t been a direct line down; more like a roller coaster. In the first 10 days, container volumes dropped by 31%. Volumes have since rebounded about halfway, to “just” a 16% drop. But according to FreightWaves SONAR’s volume booking forecast, volumes have started to drop once again and could fall to 50% of the April 6 number by May 9. This would be nearly the same level of a drop that China to U.S. exports saw during the Chinese New Year in 2022 and lower than any other point since July 2020.

Chinese ports are operating, but the bigger risk is with Chinese trucking operations. According to a report in Bloomberg, only 20% of Shanghai’s trucking capacity is operating. Trucking is a bigger part of the flow of containers in and out of the Chinese ports than in the United States. Over 75% of container volumes in China ports enter or exit on a truck, while in the U.S. both trucks and railroads move freight from our ports.

The loss of trucking capacity in China means that raw materials and components can’t get from the ports to factories and finished goods can’t leave the factories to the ports to be put on ships for export. The temporary blip (dead cat bounce) was likely containers that were already in the queue at the port prior to the lockdowns.

Since factories can’t receive new components or raw materials, they will also stop operating once their supplies are exhausted. Supply chains involve large webs of suppliers that are interconnected and just because one supplier is online does not mean that other suppliers are. Once they shut down, it will take much longer to bring them up to full productivity.

According to SONAR’s ocean intelligence dashboard, it currently takes 27 days for a vessel to travel from a Chinese port to a U.S. port. Since the volume of containers from China to the U.S. started its drop on April 6, it will likely be May 3 before U.S. ports experience a drop in volume.

It takes approximately 10 days to three weeks after a vessel arrives in the U.S. before the containers that traveled on board enter the domestic surface freight market. This would put a slowdown in trucking freight volumes related to Chinese imports between May 13 and May 24.

We have seen this play out before.

During the second half of Donald Trump’s presidency, the U.S. declared a trade war on Chinese imports. The first tariffs on Chinese goods were set at 10% and went into effect in December 2018. That was intended to be a shot across the bow and had little effect on import volumes. However, President Trump also threatened that if his demands for Chinese policy changes were not met, he would raise the tariffs to 25% by March 31, 2019.

Reacting to a threat that most importers and Chinese manufacturers thought had legitimacy, a surge of goods started to flow from China to the U.S. in what was described as a “pull-forward.”

The last of the “pull-forward” surge containers to leave Chinese ports was on April 7, 2019. SONAR’s Ocean TEU Volume Index of containers leaving Chinese ports to the U.S. dropped by 28% from April 8, 2019 to April 16, 2019.

The first signs of U.S. trucking volumes dropping took place 35 days after the drop in container volumes out of China. From May 9, 2019, to May 16, 2019, U.S. national contract truckload volumes (OTVI.USA) dropped by 6%.

In Asian import-heavy Los Angeles, the drop was much worse. Truckload volumes dropped by an astounding 28% from May 8, 2019 to May 16, 2019. The drop was so significant that I wrote my first article warning of the freight recession and stated that “Conditions for fleets are deteriorating and it will get bloody.”

The recent drop in container volumes is eerily similar to the one that took place in 2019.

The drop in 2019 started with the same speed and depth as the one we are currently facing. The trucking industry had just come through one of the hottest freight markets in history in 2018, with more new fleets entering the market than in any previous period in history.

The abrupt drops in container outflows from China in 2019 and 2022 happened almost exactly three years to the day, which means the freight market seasonal calendar was roughly identical and makes for easy comparables.

Since April 2019, maritime shipments from China to the U.S. have grown by 28%, while U.S. truckload volumes have increased by 24% in that same timeframe.

A slowdown in freight volumes from China in May 2022 will be more equitably distributed throughout the U.S. and less concentrated in Southern California, as compared to the 2019 slowdown.

Why? While Southern California’s ports are still the primary ports of entry for Chinese goods, recent port congestion has encouraged importers to shift volumes away from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. This is showing up in SONAR’s truckload market share data (OTMS).

In April/May 2019, the Los Angeles and Ontario freight markets represented 7.69% of all U.S. contracted truckload shipments. Today, those two markets represent just 6.74%.

Watching daily market conditions will be critical to fleet operators in their search for headhaul markets. A headhaul market is a freight market in which there are more loads than dispatchable trucks. In SONAR, this map is updated daily and markets are shaded in blue. The deeper the blue, the better conditions for fleets.

We always coach trucking companies to go “blue to blue” to stay loaded, and since the data comes from tenders and not load board activity, it is far more accurate of current conditions in the market because it avoids “ghost loads” from brokers.

Eventually, the lockdowns will end and Chinese production will begin once again. However, the longer China stays offline, the longer it will take for production to ramp up. Supply chains don’t come online instantly.

A drayage truck picking up cargo at the Port of Los Angeles. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

And just how long it takes for the lockdowns to end and the supply chains to begin operating again is a guessing game. But there is reason to believe that the Chinese lockdowns are far from over.

FreightWaves’ Eric Kulisch reported on April 15, 2022, that BBVA suggested that the lockdowns in China could continue until June. If this prediction plays out, it will be a difficult summer for many U.S. trucking


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: china; exportbasedeconomy; lockdowns; shortages; trucks
Posted earlier:

Crisis Or Hiccup? Assessing The Logistics Impact Of China Lockdowns

1 posted on 05/03/2022 6:03:26 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam

Could be how China is supporting Russia in the war by killing our economy. We screwed up badly by not creating a vibrant economy in our own hemisphere.


2 posted on 05/03/2022 6:11:32 AM PDT by realcleanguy (quickly things are falling apart, now that the )
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To: blam

Simple answer:

Transition AWAY from ALL Chinese products.

Remember “Made In Japan”?

Remember “Korea Mart”?

Mostly I like to remember “Made In The USA”.


3 posted on 05/03/2022 6:13:00 AM PDT by faucetman (Just the facts, ma'am, Just the facts )
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To: realcleanguy

Could be how China is supporting Russia in the war by killing our economy.


But it also kills their economy.

I have yet to find a good analysis of why they are locking down.


4 posted on 05/03/2022 6:19:52 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: realcleanguy

I don’t know. Why is China destroying it’s own economy? I can’t understand why they would do this. Generally speaking, China has never really care about its citizens, and now suddenly everything is locked down is a supposed fight against Covid. It’s okay to starve people to death but no Covid. Something isn’t right here. There must be more to this.


5 posted on 05/03/2022 6:23:00 AM PDT by Obadiah ("America is facing a winter of severe illness and death." Biden's own summary of his America.)
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To: blam

Bet them folks that wanted to ship our manufacturing stuff overseas feel pretty smug now huh? /S


6 posted on 05/03/2022 6:24:48 AM PDT by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this? 😕)
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To: faucetman

Transition AWAY from ALL Chinese products.

I agree.

China has been at war with the west for decades. They used cheap labor to get money from the west and then used that money to buy influence.

Few realize that China controls our entertainment industry either directly or indirectly.

Few realize that China “buys” our politicians either directly with campaign donations or indirectly by doing business with politicians friends or relatives.

Few realize that China copies everything the west sends to China to be manufactured from the product itself or reverse engineering of the process and equipment.

and the list goes on.

When you turn over all your necessitates to an enemy they win the war simply by cutting off the supply.

Prime example is Russia and Europe and their energy needs.

It is going to hurt to transition back to manufacturing in the US but it is necessary if we wish to survive as a free nation.


7 posted on 05/03/2022 6:26:34 AM PDT by CIB-173RDABN (I am not an expert in anything, and my opinion is just that, an opinion. I may be wrong.)
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To: rktman
"Bet them folks that wanted to ship our manufacturing stuff overseas feel pretty smug now huh? /S"

Those people are dead or retired off in the mansions.

8 posted on 05/03/2022 6:28:26 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam

Automation is going to create and oversupply of truckers. Rates will drop, and only mexicans will be driving.

Not a good time to buy a truck or get trained.


9 posted on 05/03/2022 6:31:21 AM PDT by Born to Conserve
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To: PeterPrinciple
I have yet to find a good analysis of why they are locking down.

Maybe those sinister people in power realize that China and USA can not be number one economically and exist, maybe they want to draw the USA into a war, a damn if you do, and damn if you don't war. I kind of get a really bad feeling this Ukraine war is going to suck many countries into it and no body is really going to come out on top per say if it escalates beyond the Ukraine area which my gut feeling is headed eventually in that direction.

10 posted on 05/03/2022 6:33:59 AM PDT by ReformedBeckite (1 of 3 I'm only allowing my self each day)
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To: Obadiah
Something isn’t right here. There must be more to this.

It’s yet another Chinese Civil War. Xi is going after his big money CCP rivals in the coastal cities by using his absolute authority over the military and police to disrupt their cash flows. After he secures himself another term at the party congress this Fall, the thuggish lockdown tactics may ease - but his overall attempt to achieve autarky for China will not.

11 posted on 05/03/2022 6:40:29 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: ReformedBeckite

What they are doing makes no sense from an economic or power perspective that I can see.

My best guesses:

1) They are truly afraid of their people

2) They are truly afraid of covid and know something we don’t?


12 posted on 05/03/2022 6:40:47 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: faucetman
“Transition AWAY from ALL Chinese products.”

Okay try it.
Start with try to buy a smart phone from ANY manufacturer not made in China.
Try to buy any power tool not made in China.
Try to buy a flat screen TV not made in China.

Yes, it can be done with certain things. Clothing is now made in many other countries. Mostly because Chinese labor is too expensive.

Everything I am wearing currently was made in countries other than China. I read the labels. If it is made in China, I do not buy it. However, try buying a new battery operated drill from Dewalt, Hitachi, Makita, Milwaukee, Bosch, etc. They are all made in China. The only way to reduce our imports from China is reduce the reason to produce there and ship here with import tariffs. This is what Trump was doing.

13 posted on 05/03/2022 7:13:45 AM PDT by woodbutcher1963
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To: Mr. Jeeves

Not that seems to make sense. Appreciate your thoughts.


14 posted on 05/03/2022 7:28:00 AM PDT by Obadiah ("America is facing a winter of severe illness and death." Biden's own summary of his America.)
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To: All
While Americans watch in horror as innocent Chinese citizens are caught up in an ill-conceived, reckless, or nefarious – take your pick – act by the Chinese Communist Party, there is little Americans can do about it.

Why isn't Biden/Pelosi up in arms and sending money/weapons to those oppressed people to fight back like the Ukrainians?

15 posted on 05/03/2022 7:28:55 AM PDT by BipolarBob (Ben-Gay is the muscle cream that most former homosexuals recommend. just saying.)
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To: realcleanguy
there is an entity that deserves much of the blame – the Chinese Communist Party and its draconian and inhumane lockdowns.

The CCP may be to blame in the short-term, but it's our own fault for transferring so much cheap-labor manufacturing to China in the first place making us dependent on the Communists.

16 posted on 05/03/2022 7:48:46 AM PDT by libertylover (Our BIGGEST problem, by far, is that most of the media is hate & agenda driven, not truth driven.)
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To: PeterPrinciple
I have yet to find a good analysis of why they are locking down.

My non expert opinion is that the issue is 2 fold. One, their vaccines don't work. Two, it's part of a power struggle between party rulers in the north and the business and manufacturing class in the middle. The party congress is coming in the fall and Xi flexing to show who's boss.

17 posted on 05/03/2022 8:26:17 AM PDT by Poison Pill
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To: PeterPrinciple

Here’s your analysis.

Xi declared victory over Covid in Late 2020, claiming credit for it by saying he personally oversaw and directed the efforts to contain the virus through these drastic shutdowns.

Since then for 2 years the state media has pushed the narrative constantly that China’s shutdown is superior means of controlling the virus that West democracies cannot do due to their democratic nature, and that’s why China’s authoritarian government is systemically superior to democratic forms of government. They point to the rising numbers of infections in the Europe and NA as proof that their form of government is inferior for their inability to do what is necessary to save their country.

Suddenly in 2022, the Omicron is here, and while Europe and America is mostly past it, the virus is spreading in China. To not shutdown the country to is admit their past 2 years of propaganda is a lie, and that the shutdown is not necessary, that China did not handle the virus any better than other countries.

These shutdowns are not about optimal responses, they are done to save face for “the great leader Xi”.


18 posted on 05/03/2022 8:36:33 AM PDT by Truthsearcher
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To: blam

.


19 posted on 05/03/2022 3:39:51 PM PDT by sauropod ("We put all our politicians in prison as soon as they are elected. Don’t you?" Why? "It saves time.”)
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