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Retailers moving away from chartered ships usage

Costco Wholesale Corp., Home Depot Inc. and Party City Holdco Inc. are among companies that have pulled back from ship charters.
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Retailers are moving away from using chartered ships to get around pandemic-triggered disruptions now that congestion at ports has cleared and pressures in supply chains have eased.

Costco Wholesale Corp., Home Depot Inc. and Party City Holdco Inc. are among companies that have pulled back from ship charters amid plentiful space on container ships and fast-slumping ocean-shipping rates.

A representative for Home Depot said it stopped using chartered vessels earlier this year as space opened up in global shipping. Richard Galanti, Costco’s chief financial officer, said the retailer took a $93 million charge in the most recent quarter, mostly related to reducing the company’s ship chartering.

Importers rushed to secure space on chartered ships during the Covid-19 pandemic as consumer spending surged and supply-chain snarls at ports and rail yards delayed cargoes and led to product shortages.

Shipping demand was so great in 2021 that even the nation’s biggest importers struggled to secure space on ships. Those that found space paid such a premium, with spot-market rates rising 10-fold to $20,000 or more to send a container from Asia to the U.S. West Coast, that some retailers found chartered ships an affordable alternative.

Party City started booking space on chartered vessels in mid-2021 in advance of Halloween, its busiest time of year, said Bruce Dzinski, Party City’s director of international transportation. He said some of the vessels left China late and then ran into massive container ship backups at the neighboring ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif.

Mr. Dzinski said Party City continued to use chartered ships for 20% to 25% of imports during the first half of 2022, this time routing cargoes through the Port of New York and New Jersey. But the company switched back to regular container services around the middle of this year when it became easier to secure space and shipping rates were falling.

The average cost of sending a container from Asia to the U.S. West Coast reached $1,403 by the first week of December, according to the Freightos Baltic Index, down from $14,924 at the same time last year.

The cost in November of chartering a ship capable of carrying the equivalent of 4,000 containers was $25,000 a day, according to shipping data company Alphaliner, a drop of 71% compared with 2021. “There is a huge amount of uncertainty,” said Jan Tiedemann, a lead analyst at Alphaliner. “There are not many deals happening at all.”

Jon Monroe, a shipping industry consultant, said companies trying to run their own vessels also face numerous complications, including securing berth space at ports and managing the logistics of returning empty containers to Asia.

German discount grocer Lidl committed heavily to the strategy by launching its own shipping line, Tailwind Shipping Lines, in July, to serve its chain of more than 12,000 stores across 31 countries, and it continues to run that operation.

Costco leased space aboard seven ships, each one capable of carrying about 1,000 containers, on contracts that ran for up to three years.

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