Import Volume Remains Strong At U.S. Ports

The National Retail Federation forecasts continued strong movement of imports through the summer and early fall.
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Import levels are expected to remain strong in the coming months, according to a new report from the NRF and Hackett Associates.

Cargo traffic at major ports in the United States is growing year-over-year and is expected to be above 2 million Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units through this summer and into early fall, according to the monthly Global Port Tracker report from the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates.

U.S. ports covered in the report handled 1.93 million TEU – one 20-foot container or its equivalent – in March, the latest month for which final numbers are available. That was down 1.4% from February but up 18.7% from March 2023, when Asian exports were slow after the Lunar New Year shutdowns.

Ports have not yet reported April’s numbers, but Global Port Tracker projected the month at 1.96 million TEU, up 10% year-over-year.

“We haven’t seen numbers this high for this many months in almost two years,” said Jonathan Gold, vice president for Supply Chain and Customs with the NRF. “Regardless of what headlines about the economy might say, consumers are shopping and retailers are making sure they have merchandise on hand to meet demand. The supply chain has adjusted to recent disruptions and retailers will work to keep the flow of goods moving smoothly as the back-to-school and holiday seasons approach.”

May traffic at the ports is forecast at 2.06 million TEU, up 6.8% year-over-year to tie last October for the highest level since 2.26 million TEU in August 2022. June is forecast at 2.03 million TEU, up 10.7% from the same month last year; July at 2.02 million TEU, up 5.5%; August at 2.1 million TEU, up 7.1%, and September at 2.04 million TEU, up 0.5%.

“Even with a shift in spending from goods to services, U.S. consumers continue to spend on goods,” said Ben Hackett, founder of Hackett Associates, noting a recent downturn in containerized products like furniture, clothing, and electronics. “We are still seeing a strong volume of goods flowing into ports despite global geopolitical turmoil, high interest rates, and a slowdown in economic growth. There has been a surge of container imports on all three coasts, with the strongest being the Gulf, followed by the Pacific and the East Coast. The issue now is whether this surge will continue or level off.”

The first half of 2024 is expected to total 11.9 million TEU, up 13% from the same period last year. Imports during 2023 totaled 22.3 million TEU, down 12.8% from 2022.

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