Ports are already snarled, with the $22 trillion trade in global goods facing months of severe disruption.

Beijing’s zero-tolerance approach amid an escalating virus outbreak brings the pandemic full circle, more than two years after its emergence in Wuhan upended the global economy. Shipping congestion at Chinese ports, combined with Russia’s war in Ukraine, risks a one-two punch that threatens to derail the recovery, already buffeted by inflation pressures and headwinds to growth.

Even if the virus is reined in, the disruptions will ripple globally — and extend through the year — as bunched-up cargo vessels start sailing again.

General Views in Shanghai as City Lockdown To Hit China and World Economy Hard
Trucks wait to pass through a checkpoint on a highway leading from Shanghai on March 30.
Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

“We expect a bigger mess than last year,” said Jacques Vandermeiren, the chief executive officer of the Port of Antwerp, Europe’s second-busiest for container volume, in an interview. “It will have a negative impact, and a big negative impact, for the whole of 2022.”

In the short run, the pileups will mean more costly headaches in the $22 trillion arena for global merchandise trade, which slumped in 2020 and rebounded last year. Longer term, such chaos is redrawing the contours of a global economy tied together by cross-border commerce. For some corporate executives, reeling in far-flung production networks is no longer a patriotic political slogan — it’s a business necessity given all the uncertainty.

“This has accelerated the pressing need for supply chains to become more regional,” Lorenzo Berho, CEO of Vesta, a Mexican developer of industrial buildings and distribution centers, said on a conference call last week. The shift toward shorter supply chains to places like Mexico is under way to reduce exposure to Asia. Said Berho: “Globalization as we know it may be coming to its end.”

Key policy makers are coming around to the idea that a sea change in the developed world’s supply lines is necessary. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen calls her idea for more resilient trade linkages “friend-shoring” — a not-so subtle jab at China and Russia. Much of the shift hinges on whether the pandemic has convinced consumers to accept higher prices for products made closer to home, and at least one consultant’s analysis says they are.

Relocating supply chains “might cost more, but if you can make smaller quantities that you can then sell at closer to full price, you can actually completely change the game,” said Brian Ehrig, a partner at the consulting firm Kearney and co-author of a report this month that found 78% of CEOs are either considering reshoring or have done it already. Added Shay Luo, a Kearney principal who helped write the report: “My bet is that globalization will never die, however, it will evolve to a different form.”

Choppy Seas

The pandemic has roiled global merchandise trade for more than two years

Source: WTO

Companies have weathered the roughest bouts of supply turmoil over the past year partly by raising prices — and consumers have largely absorbed the hit. In the near term, though, supplies from China pose a more menacing cloud than the questions about household demand.

Tesla Inc. lost about a month of work during the Shanghai shutdown. Retailer Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. earlier this month said an “abnormally high” level of inventory was in transit, unavailable or held at ports through the early part of this quarter. Alcoa Corp., the aluminum giant that’s a bellwether for the global economy, last week blamed transport snarls for higher inventories. Continental AG, Europe’s second-largest maker of car parts, lowered its growth forecast for global production of passenger cars and light commercial vehicles to a range of 4% to 6%, from 6% to 9% previously.

Tesla Shanghai Gigafactory Resumes Production
Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactory resumed production after nearly a month of closure due to the latest Covid-19 resurgence in the city.
Photographer: Yin Liqin/China News Service/Getty Images

Wang Xin, head of the Shenzhen Cross-Border E-Commerce Association, an organization representing some 3,000 exporters, said that even though a lockdown in that Chinese tech hub lasted only a week, “many sellers are suffering about a one-month delivery delay.”

It still takes an average of 111 days for goods to reach a warehouse in the U.S. from the moment they’re ready to leave an Asian factory, close to the record of 113 set in January and more than double the trip in 2019, according to San Francisco-based Flexport Inc., a freight forwarder. The westbound journey to Europe takes even longer — a near-record 118 days.

Shipping From Asia

Delivery delays for ocean freight have more than doubled in the pandemic

Source: Flexport

Longer queues of vessels seen off China’s coast aren’t helping. The line of cargo carriers has jumped after Shanghai, home to the world’s largest container port, initiated a city-wide lockdown late last month to combat Covid-19 cases. The total number of container ships in port and off the hub’s shared anchorage with nearby Ningbo stood at 230 as of last Wednesday, a 35% increase from this time last year, according to Bloomberg shipping data.

QuickTake: Why Supply Chains Are Entering Third Year of Chaos

Air freight is also being affected, with deliveries into Shanghai Pudong International Airport backed up, Taipei-based air and ocean freight forwarder and logistics specialist Dimerco Express Corp. said. That congestion has spread to Shenzhen, as the city that borders Hong Kong has seen a sharp increase in shipments rerouted from Shanghai.

Map
Container ship positions, as of April 20, mapped in yellow.

To ease congestion around Shanghai, sailings are being diverted to Ningbo and Taicang, according to Donny Yang, Dimerco’s director of ocean freight. At the same time, the central government has instructed that highways be kept open and unobstructed.

Carmakers to electronics manufacturers in China’s financial hub have been gradually resuming operations, as authorities have encouraged the use of closed-loop systems, in which workers live on site at their factories.

Bloomberg Economics: China’s Lockdowns Intensify Supply Snarls

“The change in Covid prevention policies in different cities has imposed an extraordinarily severe impact on logistics,” said Cui Dongshu, the secretary general of the China Passenger Car Association.

Operations At Port Of Los Angeles As Shipments Fall
The total container-ship count for America’s dual hub of Los Angeles and Long Beach reached at least 57 vessels on Wednesday, the highest since late February.
Photographer: Tim Rue/Bloomberg

Economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., in a research note last week, said supply-chain setbacks “have been somewhat worse than we anticipated, and we have adjusted our growth and inflation forecasts slightly in response in recent weeks.” When the bottlenecks in Asia start to clear, it will likely bring a flood of containers just as a seasonal pickup in imports gets under way.

The total container-ship count for America’s dual hub of Los Angeles and Long Beach reached at least 57 vessels last Wednesday, the highest since late February. A few other gauges like container dwell times are also creeping higher again.

Wave of U.S. Imports

Inbound container volumes in major U.S. ports neared a record in March

Source: Port data compiled by Bloomberg

*TEU = 20-foot equivalent container units

Some of California’s backlog has merely shifted east in search of faster routes — shiploads of goods are lined up from New York City to Charleston, South Carolina. Data from MarineTraffic recently showed a major reversal: The U.S. East Coast topped the West Coast in the amount of container capacity that’s waiting at anchor to offload.

The pileups in Europe are just as severe or worse, compounded by the proximity to the war in Ukraine. Key ports such as Rotterdam, Hamburg, Antwerp and three in the U.K. are working at or above capacity, which means they’re already struggling to accept more containers because they don’t have space to store them.

European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, in a speech Friday, said Europe’s integration in global value chains was even deeper than the U.S.’s. Trade as a share of the euro area’s gross domestic product rose to 54% in 2019 from 31% two decades earlier, she said, compared with America’s 3 percentage-point rise to 26%.

Port of Hamburg as German Seaports Face Hit From Russia Sanctions
It takes a near-record 118 days for goods to reach a warehouse in Europe from the moment they’re ready to leave an Asian factory.
Photographer: Imke Lass/Bloomberg

She also cited a recent survey that found 46% of German companies get significant inputs from China. Of those, almost half are planning to reduce that dependency. Russia’s invasion now means the search for the lowest-cost suppliers must be refocused around geopolitical alliances.

“We must work towards making trade safer in these unpredictable times, while also leveraging our regional strength,” said Lagarde, the former managing director of the International Monetary Fund. “Even industries that are not considered strategic are likely to anticipate the fracturing of the global trading order and adjust production themselves.”

By

Brendan MurrayAnn Koh, and Kevin Varley

April 25, 2022, 5:05 PM EDT

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2022-04-25/china-s-covid-crisis-threatens-global-supply-chain-chaos-for-summer-2022