NRF Sees 2020 Record Breaking Retail Imports
January 11, 2021
Imports
seen during 2020 appear to be headed toward a new record despite the
coronavirus pandemic, and remain at high levels as 2021 begins,
according to the monthly Global Port Tracker report released today by
the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates.
“Nobody would have thought last spring that 2020 would be a record year
for imports, but it was clearly an unpredictable year,” NRF Vice
President for Supply Chain and Customs Policy Jonathan Gold said.
“Consumers and retailers once again proved their resilience in the face
of unprecedented challenges. Thanks in part to government stimulus,
retail sales saw strong growth during 2020 even with the pandemic, and
import numbers show retailers expect the economic recovery will continue
during 2021.”
With high import volumes over the past few months, ships carrying goods
from Asia have backed up at West Coast ports in particular, and there
have been shortages of shipping capacity and equipment including chassis
and empty containers.
“With COVID-19 accelerating across the country, the pandemic is causing
logistics problems beyond the congestion at the ports,” Hackett
Associates Founder Ben Hackett said. “With large numbers of people
infected by the virus and unable to report for work, the supply chain is
potentially facing challenges to find enough workers for goods
distribution.”

U.S. ports covered by Global Port Tracker handled 2.11 million
Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units in November, the latest month for which
final numbers are available. That was up 24.5 percent year-over-year but
down 4.9 percent from October’s 2.21 million TEU, which set the record
for the largest number of containers handled during a single month since
NRF began tracking imports in 2002. A TEU is one 20-foot container or
its equivalent.
December
was projected at 2.02 million TEU, down 17.3 percent year-over-year but
still one of only six times in nearly 20 years that the monthly total
has hit the 2 million TEU mark. If the December number holds up once
actual data is available, 2020 will have ended with a total of 21.9
million TEU, up 1.5 percent from 2019 and breaking the previous annual
record of 21.8 million TEU set in 2018.
Imports during the last half of 2020 set a string of new records,
including an all-time high of 8.3 million TEU for the July-October “peak
season” when retailers rush to bring in merchandise for the winter
holidays each year.
January is forecast at 1.96 million TEU, which would be up 7.7 percent
from a year ago and the busiest January on record; February at 1.6
million TEU, up 6.1 percent year-over-year, and March at 1.64 million
TEU, up 19 percent from March 2020, when factories in China failed to
reopen after the Lunar New Year holiday because of the coronavirus.
April is forecast at 1.76 million TEU, up 9.6 percent, and May at 1.86
million TEU, up 21.7 percent, both year-over-year.
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