A shortage of shipping containers at major global ports is now seriously impacting fastener availability in the UK and Ireland, the British & Irish Association of Fastener Distributors warns. The crisis is also forcing up container freight costs three-fold and exacerbating other cost drivers to fuel sharp product inflation.
Container shortages are currently the biggest disrupter according to specialist supply chain media The Loadstar on December 1. BIAFD importer members say they now have major backlogs at factories, which cannot be shipped to the UK and Ireland due to the lack of containers.
The CAx, an index of container availability, is now at record low levels. A reading below 0.5 indicates a deficit of containers. For week 49 the reading for Shanghai Port was just 0.03 – compared with 0.53 ten weeks previously, and 0.66 in week 6 of 2020. The indices for other global – and also European ports – show plunging container availability over recent weeks.
“The container shortages are an indirect consequence of the Coronavirus pandemic,” according to BIAFD. “Emerging early from the pandemic, Chinese factories recovered production and recommenced exports to global markets.
“More recently, export shipments increased ahead of the Chinese National Day holiday in October, further ratcheting during the peak season run-up to Christmas.”
Container return times to ports in all import markets have significantly increased due to coronavirus-related shortages of vehicles and drivers.
Container shortages have also been exacerbated by the volumes of personal protection equipment being imported, BIAFD reports. Many of these containers have now been moved to inland storage points but the containers are unlikely to be released for many months and potentially longer.
“With finances hit hard by the collapse of global trade, resulting from the pandemic, shipping lines radically tightened capacity on most routes. Lack of capacity and low backhaul profitability has meant containers returning to export markets far more slowly.”
More lucrative transpacific routes to American markets have also taken priority for both container ships and containers over European routes.
While container manufacturers have increased production, output lags well behind demand, with the knowledge that the container market will eventually rebalance a disincentive to further ramping up output.
“All the indications are that it will be several months before equilibrium is restored. With backlogs rapidly growing at exporters and an early Chinese New Year putting further pressure on capacity, it looks improbable the situation will return to any level of normality until the end of quarter one 2021.”
Some carriers have applied substantial port congestion surcharges, further adding to importers’ costs. BIAFD importers report container freight costs tripling, without factoring in port surcharges or costs of rerouted shipments. This means an effective on-cost to products often in excess of 10%.
Other inflationary pressures on fastener costs were already becoming evident.
“Asian steel prices have increased sharply in the last month, with further increases predicted, as supply tightness is compounded by a serious accident in a major Korean steel plant,” BIAFD reports.
European steel lead times have also extended sharply, for some wire grades tripling to more than twenty weeks, and steel producers are expected to introduce substantial cost increases early in 2021.
The British & Irish Association of Fastener Distributors represents the interests of more than 85 United Kingdom and Ireland fastener importers, wholesalers and distributors. Web: BIAFD.org
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