“We have come to the conclusion that we don’t really know how this is all going to work out,” he reiterated. “Yes, we believe we will get through it. Yes, people are making sane and rational responses now. But we still don’t know the duration of this, and that’s the important thing to keep in mind as we look through all our data. There is so much unknown at this point.”
Supplier shipping delays
As Anderson pointed out, there is a risk of cascading shipping and production delays. Approximately 15 percent of HDMA’s supply community is reporting that they have unknown delays of inbound product; they have no idea when the product is going to arrive or if it is going to arrive from the source they initially bought it from.
HDMA also reported that 11.5 percent of all shipments inbound are delayed, while 7.4 percent of shipments outbound are delayed.
What is particularly noteworthy is that over the course of two weeks, just 11 percent of suppliers said they had no inbound delays compared to 22 percent of suppliers two weeks prior. And 54 percent of suppliers said two weeks ago that they were experiencing no outbound shipping delays. Over the course of two weeks, that number has dropped to 29 percent experiencing no delays.
Additionally, in the last two weeks, HDMA members indicated that their top concerns are the loss of their labor force, quarantine driving down freight volumes, a complete drop-off from customer order activity, and the health and wellbeing of their employees.
“People are concerned about the length and duration of mandated closures and quarantine efforts,” Anderson explained. “We see concerns around the supply chain and cascading shipping delays. A major concern for suppliers is what is going to happen in general to our economy. The impact of COVID-19 is built on a weakening economy and forecasts for a slowing year. This hasn’t helped any of that.”
John Blodgett, vice president of sales and marketing at MacKay & Company, explained that commercial fleets reported that their average weekly miles were down by 6 percent during the pandemic. Approximately 35 percent of fleet respondents surveyed said they reduced employee hours, while 9 percent laid-off employees and 8 percent closed locations.
Ultimately, Dieli advised the more than 400 listeners who tuned into the webinar not to “overrun the data” and to take the time to gather credible information.
“We will inform you as we get information. We will try to answer any questions you may have,” he said. “In the meantime, please stay safe. We will get through this. We are smart, we are resourceful, and this is a solvable problem.”