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The supply challenges that businesses and consumers face could soon be abating as port congestion eases, transportation labor hiring improves, and factories in Asia reopen. Still, it may take several more quarters until all is back to normal. Until then, companies that are less dependent on the supply chain may benefit.

Last weekend I was at a pumpkin patch with my daughter. The good news: There were plenty of pumpkins to pick. The bad news: Hayrides were cancelled because of – what else – labor shortages, according to a hand-written sign.
 
By now, we know the story. The world is short of everything, and everything takes too long to ship. A big question for the markets – amid a busy week of earnings reports in which consensus expectations are for the third-highest quarterly profit margin since 2008 – is will supply chain issues severely squeeze margins?1 The bigger question (including for all of us consumers) is when will supply challenges and shortages abate?

supply_chain_cartoon

In this week’s commentary, we highlight three key charts to watch for possible signs of bottlenecks easing: container shipping costs, truck driver shortages, and factory closings in Southeast Asia. It looks to us that all three are peaking, although it may take several more quarters to unclog the logjam globally. In the investment implications section, we also discuss how investors should be positioned in the meantime.

Container shipping costs could be subsiding

For the first time since the end of September, the spot freight rate for a 40-foot container fell below $10,000.2 The weekly data showed three consecutive week-over-week declines for the first time since March 2021. This could be due to several factors.

First, the peak shipping season to stock retailers’ shelves for the holiday shopping season appears to be behind us. Indeed, it seems that peak season has been front-loaded this year to July – September versus September – October, historically.3

Second, wait times at sea and at ports – which could be peaking – are partly to blame for high shipping rates because they tie up containers and leave them in short supply. The latest data suggest that the number of ships at anchor is starting to decline, and the number of days at anchor, which has more than doubled to nine days on average today from four days in the spring/early summer, could also be peaking, as seen in the Freight Activity and Rates chart. 4

There is one caveat: This chart examines the spot rates for bookings within a week. In practice, however, many customers sign longer-term agreements, and 2022 contract rates are expected to increase by 6%.5 Still, spot rates are expected to decline in 2022,6 and the potential peaking in port congestion could be an early sign that the containership logjam may be easing – good news for consumers.

Port congestion in Los Angeles is starting to ease, and container freight rates may be peaking

Truck driver shortages could be improving cyclically; still challenged structurally

The key reasons for container ships being stuck at ports and nearly 30% of container boxes sitting at terminal yards for more than five days (versus the two-day norm)7 are shortages of port workers and truck operators. For example, the number of truck transportation employees is still 2% below pre-pandemic levels, while demand for trucking services is running near all-time highs, and the number of truck driver job openings is at roughly 231,000.8 Consistent with that, the American Trucking Association estimates a driver shortage of 239,000 by early 2022.9

Still, the good news is transportation workers are increasingly coming back, incentivized by higher pay. Indeed, average hourly earnings in the transportation and warehousing sector rose 6% year over year versus 4.6% for all private workers.10 And that’s exactly what it will take – continued pay increases to attract workers to a sector that was experiencing a shortage even before the pandemic.

This shortage was further exacerbated by the spread of COVID-19 with two million more workers retiring during the pandemic than forecasted.11 And for the truck transportation sector specifically, the median age for drivers of private fleets is 15 years older than that of all U.S. workers.12 It is likely that the retirement rate in trucking was higher than other industries.

Net-net, we expect worker availability to continue to improve, but trucking rates are likely to stay elevated amid robust demand and ongoing trucker shortages that will require higher pay. It’s no wonder that Tesla and the private equity community are increasingly investing in autonomous long-haul transport.

Record low capacity due to driver shortages lead to a rise in truck shipping rates

Factories should be reopening in Southeast Asia

China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand are among the top manufacturing destinations globally. Until recently, COVID cases were surging in these countries. High cases and low vaccination rates resulted in strict lockdowns including factory closures.13 Even now, Oxford’s containment and health index, which measures both lockdown restrictions and testing and contract tracing, indicates that Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand have yet to ease restrictions.14

Cases, however, are now coming down and vaccination rates are rising in these countries. For example, the first-dose vaccination rate in Malaysia is now close to 70%, while in Vietnam it is near 30% but ramping up quickly. With these improvements, we expect that restrictions could soon begin to ease, and with that, manufacturing shortages should too.

Pandemic containment restrictions are still in place in Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand

Sectors to avoid and to consider

The phrase “supply chain” has exploded in popularity recently and may end up being among the most searched terms in 2021, according to Google Trends.15 And while there are tentative positive signs of global supply chain issues easing (as we discussed previously), we should expect them to take time to fully resolve.

What does this mean for corporate margins in the meantime? By and large, companies should be able to sustain margins as they are raising prices to make up for higher costs and wages. For example, net 44% of small businesses plan to raise prices in the next three months, while net 26% expect to increase compensation during the same period.16 Consumers are benefitting from wage increases, which help overcome inflation. This virtuous cycle is driving prices higher but is preserving (for now) companies’ margins and consumers’ purchasing power.

However, we should expect significant divergence in sector profit-margin results. In our view, we would avoid sectors with thin profit margins where low revenue per worker and high logistics and rising wage costs could further squeeze companies. The consumer staples and consumer discretionary sectors fall into this category. We prefer sectors that are less impacted by global supply chain disruptions, have high pricing power and higher revenue per employee, and that should continue to deliver near-record margins. These include real estate, financials, communication services, and parts of information technology, like semiconductors.

Consensus forecasts are for third-quarter net profit margins to be the third highest since 2008

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1. FactSet Earnings Insight, October 15, 2021.
2. Bloomberg, Drewry WCI Composite Container Freight Benchmark Rate, as of October 14, 2021.
3. Bank of America Transportation Research, October 2021, Bloomberg.
4. The Port of Los Angeles, as of October 14, 2021.
5. Drewry, as of October 14, 2021.
6. Drewry, as of October 14, 2021.
7. Bank of America Shipping Research, October 15, 2021.
8. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook, October 2021.
9. American Trucking Associations, ATAs Driver Shortage Report, July 2019.
10. Bureau of Labor Statistics, October 8, 2021.
11. U.S. Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Population Survey data, July 2021.
12. American Trucking Associations, ATAs Driver Shortage Report, July 2019.
13. Reuters, “How COVID-19 in Southeast Asia is threatening global supply chains,” October 6, 2021.
14. University of Oxford, COVID-19 Government Response Tracker, as of October 18, 2021.
15. Google Trends, as of October 18,2021.
16. National Federation of Independent Business Small Business Economic Trends, August 2021.


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Anastasia Amoroso

Anastasia Amoroso

Anastasia Amoroso is a Managing Director and the Chief Investment Strategist at iCapital. In this role, she is responsible for providing insight on private and public market investing opportunities for advisors and their high-net-worth clients. Previously, Anastasia was an Executive Director and the Head of Cross-Asset Thematic Strategy for J.P. Morgan Private Bank, where she identified and invested in emerging technologies and disruptive trends such as artificial intelligence, decarbonization, and gene therapy. She also developed global tactical ideas and implemented institutional-level implementation across asset classes for clients. Anastasia regularly appears on CNBC and Bloomberg TV and is often quoted in the financial press. See Full Bio.