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Pandemic side effect: America's backed up ports

The historic backup at America's ports — critical entry points for sneakers or Peloton bikes — is having a boomerang effect on companies and shoppers.

Why it matters: The port chaos may get worse. More stimulus checks are coming down the pipe, pushing Americans to spend and order more.


What's happening: Port of Long Beach, the second-busiest after Port of Los Angeles, handled more containers last month than any other February in its 110-year history.

What they're saying: "The good news is the economy is getting better. People are spending money. Given the consumer demand, which is beyond what we expected, even if you go back six months, we do have challenges," Mario Cordero, the port's executive director, tells Axios.

Catch up quick: Bored-at-home Americans with more money redirected spending to online shopping — setting off a rat race to get products from overseas.

The problem: A shortage of containers that carry the stuff that's shipped to the states via sea. Containers that do get sent are tied up at America's busiest ports, where workers are overwhelmed in unloading them — making the backup and the container shortage worse.

Another way to think about it: It's like a crowded airport, Daniel Hackett of shipping consultancy firm Hackett Associates, tells Axios.

  • "The previous plane is still waiting to depart a gate, and the plane you are waiting for has arrived but is forced to sit and wait for the gate to free up," Hackett says.
  • More people are waiting around the gate — the ones waiting to board the delayed and upcoming plane, much like the containers left floating at sea, waiting for a berth at the port.

How it's playing out: The high demand means shipping costs are soaring — which may eventually get passed on to the consumer.

  • The delays mean companies can't stock or re-stock shelves. Meanwhile, shoppers have less inventory to choose from — or their orders get delayed.
  • Executives are mentioning the problem on earnings calls or investor conferences at the highest rate in at least 16 years, data from research platform Sentieo shows.

What they're saying: At Foot Locker, "inventory delays due to congestion at the domestic ports" prevented it from meeting consumer demand for footwear and other "comfort clothing," the CEO told analysts.

  • It's caused delays for furniture, sporting goods, lawn and garden items at Costco, its CFO told Wall Street analysts last week.
  • Worth noting: Companies like Gap turned to other options in lieu of the at-sea chaos, like more-expensive air freight.

The bottom line: The port havoc is showing up in companies' financial reports — and threatens delays not just for consumers, but for manufacturers waiting on imported parts.

What to watch: The retail industry expects shipping volumes to remain elevated for now. But the mass vaccination rollout is picking up speed and a return to normal could be nigh.

  • That means people could start putting funds toward "travel, or things that don't require as much importing of merchandise," says Hackett.

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Bodycam footage shows Louisiana officers beating Black man who died in custody in 2019

Bodycam footage obtained and released by AP shows Louisiana state troopers stunning, punching and dragging Ronald Greene, a Black man who died in police custody in 2019 following a high-speed chase near the city of Monroe.

Why it matters: The arrest of Greene is the subject of a federal civil rights investigation, and Louisiana authorities refused to publicly release footage captured during the arrest for two years, which incited accusations of a cover-up.

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Epic's long game against Apple

Epic's Apple lawsuit is costing the company dearly, but the game developer has its eye on a valuable long-term goal: prying tomorrow's virtual worlds loose from the grip of app store proprietors like Apple.

Between the lines: Epic isn't spending a fortune in legal fees and foregoing a ton of revenue just to shave some costs off in-app purchases on today's phones. Rather, it's planning for a future of creating virtual universes via augmented and virtual reality — without having to send a big chunk of their economies to Apple or Google.

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