GLOBAL decline in container demand has abated sharply in March 2023 on most major trade lanes, except for US imports from Asia, which have now continually dropped at a pace fluctuating around minus 20 per cent year on year.
This has often been explained by US inventory correction. However, from the point of view of sales, data from the US Census Bureau clearly shows that the process of clearing inventories is not progressing rapidly, according to Sea-Intelligence.
Since inflation impacts both sales and inventories, an inventory to sales ratio is not impacted by inflation.
"The data shows that for manufacturers, the size of inventories have stagnated and certainly not decreasing. Both retailers and wholesalers on the other hand are seeing an increasing trend. This means that the size of inventories relative to sales continues to increase, and if any underlying inventory correction is going on, it is clearly insufficient," said Alan Murphy, CEO, Sea-Intelligence.
Part of the disconnect might simply be owing to the contraction of the supply chain, however the supply chain is now rapidly approaching normalization.
"One alternative explanation might very well be a normalization of consumer spending habits. The boom in US imports in 2020-2021 was to some degree driven by consumers shifting spending away from services and over onto goods, which increases container volumes as well," Mr Murphy said.
A reversal of this spending behaviour will mean a negative impact on container volumes for quite a while longer - and consequently the upcoming peak season 2023 might turn out not to be present, he added.
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