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Skip to main content DON’T MISS TOMORROW’S SUPPLY CHAIN INDUSTRY NEWS Let Supply Chain Dive’s free newsletter keep you informed, straight from your inbox. * Daily Dive M-F view sample Topics covered: logistics, freight, operations, procurement, regulation, technology, risk/resilience and more. * Operations Weekly Every Tuesday view sample Topics covered: S&OP, inventory/demand planning, technology integration, DC/warehouse management, and more. * Procurement Weekly Every Thursday Topics covered: Supplier relationships, payments & contracts, risk management, sustainability & ethics, trade & tariffs, and more. * Logistics Weekly Every Wednesday Topics covered: last mile, shipper-carrier relations, and trends in rail, ocean, air, truck, and parcel shipping. By signing up to receive our newsletter, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe at anytime. A valid email address is required. * * * * * Reading Now Off-price retailers shift tactics as inventory gluts squeeze the industry By: Sarah Zimmerman * Reading Now Retailers take expensive measures to clear inventory ahead of peak season By: Kate Magill * Reading Now Inventory management’s role in the transformation of manufacturing By: Eide Bailly * Reading Now Best Buy bucks the glut trend, boasting healthy inventory By: Kate Magill * Reading Now Retail inventory in 2022: Normal is still nowhere in sight By: Ben Unglesbee * Reading Now How grocers are managing the twin pressures of supply chain disruption and inflation By: Jeff Wells * Reading Now Car parts supplier loads up on inventory as just-in-time delivery loses appeal By: Maura Webber Sadovi * Reading Now Just-in-time and safety stock require a careful balance By: Matt Leonard Trendline INVENTORY MANAGEMENT Workers fill inventory among shelves lined with goods at an Amazon warehouse on September 4, 2014 in Brieselang, Germany. Warehouses have seen shifts in consumer demand affect product assortment in various industries. Sean Gallup via Getty Images NOTE FROM THE EDITOR As economic conditions change, so do inventory management strategies. Few industries showcase this better than the retail industry. At first, the debate was whether companies should stock up just-in-case, or just-in-time. Many chose the former. But more recently, a demand downturn has led many sellers to regret that decision. High inventory levels are now affecting their balance sheets at a time of economic uncertainty. In this trendline, we’ll take a trip back in time exploring how retailers in the grocery, fashion and automotive sectors have navigated inventory management trends. I hope you find it insightful. Edwin Lopez Managing Editor * Reading Now Off-price retailers shift tactics as inventory gluts squeeze the industry By: Sarah Zimmerman * Reading Now Retailers take expensive measures to clear inventory ahead of peak season By: Kate Magill * Sponsored Inventory management’s role in the transformation of manufacturing Sponsored content by Eide Bailly * Reading Now Best Buy bucks the glut trend, boasting healthy inventory By: Kate Magill * Reading Now Retail inventory in 2022: Normal is still nowhere in sight By: Ben Unglesbee * Reading Now How grocers are managing the twin pressures of supply chain disruption and inflation By: Jeff Wells * Reading Now Car parts supplier loads up on inventory as just-in-time delivery loses appeal By: Maura Webber Sadovi * Reading Now Just-in-time and safety stock require a careful balance By: Matt Leonard OFF-PRICE RETAILERS SHIFT TACTICS AS INVENTORY GLUTS SQUEEZE THE INDUSTRY Markdowns by large retailers have created a domino effect, placing new pressures on the model of stores like Burlington and Ross. By: Sarah Zimmerman • Published Sept. 13, 2022 As businesses aggressively pursue markdowns to clear excess inventory, off-price retailers are now finding themselves in direct competition with brand name stores. Burlington Stores, Ross and Nordstrom Rack are among those that have experienced declining demand as consumers seek discounts at big-name box stores such as Target and Walmart. To keep up, off-price stores are now slashing prices even further and trying to improve their product assortment. “The promotional environment has gotten so aggressive in such a short period of time that we need to make the move on [marking down] the goods,” said Ross CEO Barbara Rentler on a Q2 earnings call. “Otherwise, we’re not offering the customer the value that she wants and needs.” It’s a sharp reversal from the optimism executives expressed just months ago. Many had expected that inflationary pressures and a glut of inventory would have given off-price retailers expanded buying options at lower prices, allowing them to gain more in markups. Burlington had predicted “the opening of supply” from industry-wide glut would allow it to secure higher markups in the latter half of the year, though CEO Michael O’Sullivan walked back that expectation on a Q2 earnings call. The retailer is now focused on keeping inventory levels balanced and improving its assortment of products while keeping costs down. “We need to challenge every hanger in our assortment and make sure we are offering the best value,” said O’Sullivan. “During this time, we will tightly control buying and liquidity, carefully managed inventories and aggressively pursue opportunities to drive down expenses.” Retailers grappling with an overwhelming amount of inventory are choosing to hold on to inventory rather than hand it off to the off-price market. Some are deploying big discounts, while others including Gap are choosing to store products to sell later when demand improves. “Rather than head to off-price at the point where they normally would, retailers might hang on to the merchandise a little longer or try to sell it at their own stores at a markdown,” said Marshall Fisher, professor of operations, information and decisions at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. “Branded retailers are becoming a stronger competitor to off-price because their excess inventory means they’re offering a greater range product.” For branded retailers, the calculus is simple. With financial losses mounting from supply chain delays and lower consumer demand, companies hope aggressive discounts can help rightsize their stock levels. Burlington’s CEO noted retailers are extending discounts to more premium items, pressuring off-price stores to compete on price and quality. “The current level of promotional activity will not last forever,” O’Sullivan told analysts last month. “But while it does, it will create a very significant headwind for us.” To keep up, some off-price retailers are focused on clearing their own inventory levels to improve product assortment. “We are clearing through lower price point items at Nordstrom Rack, to make room for the premium brands at great prices that drive the Rack business,” Nordstrom President and Chief Brand Officer Pete Nordstrom said on a Q2 earnings call. Despite the headwinds, some believe that industry-wide glut still presents off-price a major opportunity for growth. Brett Rose, CEO of wholesale distributor United National Consumer Suppliers, said that even though less retailers are selling to off-price, there are still plenty of products available. “You’re not seeing a ton of retailers selling off excess goods to off-price retailers,” said Rose. “You’re seeing a lot of suppliers being canceled by retailers, who are then selling it off the off-price retailers for a significant discount. So it’s almost a better deal.” Many off-price retailers buy products at lower prices to hold on and sell later, for example buying winter jackets in the summer. The key, Rose said, is staying in touch with what the consumer wants to effectively plan for demand. The TJX Companies, which owns TJ Maxx and Marshalls, reported strong profitability in the past quarter despite a decline in U.S. sales, with President and CEO Ernie Herrman saying on the company’s Q2 call that there are “plenty of open-to-buy to take advantage of the current environment.” “Our teams executed our off-price fundamentals extremely well, and our merchants did an excellent job buying the right merchandise in the right categories,” he said. Article top image credit: Daphne Howland/Supply Chain Dive RETAILERS TAKE EXPENSIVE MEASURES TO CLEAR INVENTORY AHEAD OF PEAK SEASON Faced with sluggish consumer demand, Gap, Kohl’s and Nordstrom are deploying deep discounts and pulling items from the shelves. By: Kate Magill • Published Aug. 30, 2022 With consumer demand cooling, retailers have shifted from scrambling to secure supply to aggressively clearing excess inventory. Rising inflation has tempered spending and pushed many businesses to deploy steep markdowns and other measures to move unsold products. The Census Bureau reported that July retail sales remained flat compared to June, with the National Retail Federation noting clothing and clothing accessory store sales were down 0.6% month-over-month. “I think a lot of companies said, ‘Oh there’s a buying spree,’ and forgot the spree part,” said Erika Marsillac, professor of supply chain management at Old Dominion University. “A spree ends, this is not something that continues forever.” Slowed spending came just as many companies were receiving orders placed months ago when demand was higher. As a result, retailers are now overwhelmed with a “sonic boom of inventory,” Urban Outfitters CEO Richard Hayne said on a Q2 call. Businesses are employing a variety of tactics, including steep discounts, order cancellations and pack and hold strategies, in an attempt to clear their shelves of stagnant products and make room for holiday inventory. “None of them is a perfect tool, but retailers have to resort to them for lack of better options,” Jie Zhang, a marketing professor at University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business, said in an email. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “I hesitate to call it a blood bath, but it’s going to be ugly in terms of the amount of discounting and markdowns” Richard Hayne CEO of Urban Outfitters -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- After suffering slow sales beginning in late June, Nordstrom is among retailers now prioritizing product markdowns and inventory clearance to make room for new products, Nordstrom President and Chief Brand Officer Pete Nordstrom said on the company’s Aug. 23 Q2 earnings call. Urban Outfitters, which owns brands including Free People and Anthropologie, is also striving to reduce inventory through the second half of the year with increased markdowns and order cancellations. When it comes to markdowns for the retailer’s lower-tier brands, such as Urban Outfitters, Hayne was pragmatic. “I hesitate to call it a blood bath, but it’s going to be ugly in terms of the amount of discounting and markdowns,” the CEO said on the call. Markdowns and order cancellations, while effective in clearing excess stock, are “very hurtful” to retailers’ bottom lines, Zhang said. That is proving true for Nordstrom – the retailer estimates it will lose $200 million in gross profits in the second half of the year due to markdowns and clearance efforts. Promotion-heavy environments also risk making discounts the norm for shoppers, hurting retailers’ further, Marsillac noted. “As [discounts] become more frequent, they then become almost expected,” Marsillac said. “But first of all you have to get that markdown in front of people for the right things. If someone is not in the store, is not looking online, they’re not going to see those markdowns.” Some retailers like The Gap and Kohl’s are pulling less seasonal items from the shelves to attempt to sell them at a later date when demand improves. Kohl’s is saving its fleecewear to sell during the holidays, CFO Jill Timm said on the company’s Q2 earnings call, while Gap is holding on to basics like T-shirts and shorts. “We’re confident that we will be able to integrate our pack and hold inventory with future assortments as the majority of goods are carefully selected seasonal core items we routinely use to round out our assortments,” CFO Katrina O’Connell said during the company’s Aug. 25 Q2 earnings call. No matter what, clearing out inventory won’t be cheap, as even pack-and-hold strategies require higher costs for storage. It’s also still unclear if retailers will be successful in their efforts to stabalize inventory levels, especially if inflation remains high and consumers continue to slow their spending. “If in fact that is what most other consumers are going to do, then companies are going to have a whole bunch of inventory left over,” Marsillac said. Article top image credit: Stephen Maturen / Stringer via Getty Images Sponsored INVENTORY MANAGEMENT’S ROLE IN THE TRANSFORMATION OF MANUFACTURING Sponsored content By Eide Bailly By: Parker Coffman • Published March 16, 2023 Recent Gartner research shows that 80% of CEOs are increasing digital technology investments to address current economic challenges. For manufacturers, digital technologies are essential to future growth opportunities. Modern manufacturing companies are utilizing technology to improve processes, increase efficiencies, and adapt quickly to today’s dynamic environment. They’re considering solutions that simplify and automate labor-intensive processes, shrink excess costs, and reduce risks to keep themselves competitive. This is especially relevant when it comes to inventory management. THE ROLE OF INVENTORY MANAGEMENT IN MANUFACTURING Manufacturers can’t afford to have inaccurate data or be held back by manual inventory processes, but years of pieced-together applications have resulted in an infrastructure that lacks integrated capabilities and offers limited visibility into essential business information. IBM recently found only 28% of manufacturing organizations are using data across systems to improve processes. Further, only one in five companies have access to real-time manufacturing data across the enterprise. A robust inventory management system enables manufacturers to flex and adapt quickly, improving profits and the bottom line. Good inventory management extends from point of origin all the way to the end-user and is critical to a resilient supply chain. For most businesses, the supply chain is not only the primary center, but one of the most challenging aspects to running a profitable operation. Manufacturers struggle with how to deploy inventory in the right quantity, locations, and time, how to react to uncertainty around demand, and how to deal with over and under-stocking. And, without a comprehensive map of their supply chain, it is difficult for manufacturers to know how they’ll be impacted when disruption occurs, let alone proactively plan. A robust, integrated inventory management solution can serve as a guide to supply chain operations, enabling visibility into the source of each component that goes into finished goods and the path those components take to the facility. HOW TO CHOOSE THE RIGHT INVENTORY MANAGEMENT SOLUTION In an ever-changing world, modern manufacturers need an agile and flexible business management solution to keep up with innovation and globalization. This begins with assessing your business’ current needs and potential improvement areas. >> A FOCUS ON PEOPLE, PROCESSES, AND TECHNOLOGY FIRST WILL ALLOW MANUFACTURERS TO BUILD A MORE RESILIENT, LONG-TERM DIGITAL OPERATIONS STRATEGY. Rapid growth demands a solution that will help manufacturers scale to the next level. Efficient and effective inventory management begins with a centralized system for pulling data, managing inventory, connecting devices and technology, and marrying information across departments. A connected business is a smart business. Here are five things to consider when it comes to an inventory management solution: 1. Built for the manufacturing industry. Look for a solution that streamlines all essential business processes, including accounting and operations, CRM, sales order, production control, inventory, supply chain, and warehouse management. 2. Ease of use. Look for a system that delivers a single integrated solution that replaces all disconnected systems and can be accessed via any device or any network. 3. Supply chain visibility. Real-time visibility is a must for manufacturers. Look for a solution that provides access to actionable data from the raw material stages through processing, manufacturing, assembly, and end delivery. 4. Agility. The use of real-time data flow should enable your organization to respond and recover quickly as various circumstances arise. 5. Process standardization. A digital inventory management solution can enable standardized processes. This will equip manufacturers to easily move production among plants, departments or production lines, as well as engage simultaneous product development for quicker response time. Adopting a digital inventory management solution was well worth the time and effort for manufacturing company Skin Script. Order picking and inventory management were a constant struggle, with manual shipping and order picking processes leading to no true inventory visibility. By switching to a scalable, integrated cloud system, Skin Script was able to connect their inventory and order management system to their CRM, reorganize inventory to optimize their warehouse, and increase efficiency. The company went from completing a maximum of 250-300 orders a day to successfully managing over 1,000 orders a day. Skin Script tripled their sales in three years and saw substantial growth thanks to improved production, increased efficiencies and streamlined inventory management. This kind of transformation is possible with a flexible, agile business management solution. A more efficient, automated solution will not only solve inventory pain points but also position your company for success. Article top image credit: Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock.com BEST BUY BUCKS THE GLUT TREND, BOASTING HEALTHY INVENTORY The consumer electronics company saw inventory down 6% year-on-year in Q2. By: Kate Magill • Published Sept. 9, 2022 While other retailers complain of bloated shelves, Best Buy is seeing its inventory levels fall back to pre-pandemic trends, CEO Corie Barry said on a Q2 earnings call. The electronics retailer saw a 6% YoY dip in inventory in Q2, Barry said, with product supply at a “healthy” level. Barry attributed the positive trend in part to proactive inventory management throughout the quarter as consumer demand changed. Best Buy also benefited from its growing outlet network, which allows the company to tap into a new consumer segment and “unlocks a very productive way to refurbish inventory, giving it a new life,” Barry said. The retailer opened two new outlet stores in Virginia and Phoenix during the quarter and opened a new location in Chicago last month, bringing the national total to 19. Although Best Buy didn’t have excess inventory, bloated levels across the industry still weighed on the retailer’s bottom line. The Q2 promotional environment was more aggressive than anticipated, CFO Matthew Bilunas said, as other retailers drive a discount-heavy market in an effort to clear shelves. Walmart CFO John David Rainey said on the company’s August earnings call that home electronics remained one of the retailer’s most overstocked product categories headed into Q3. Such promotions contributed to a softening in Best Buy’s operating profit, which dropped by more than half compared to a year ago. “Generally, we’re back to where our levels of promotionality were before the pandemic started,” Bilunas said. “And that has more to do with the general amount of inventory in the channel right now that, as the consumer demand wanes and inventory increases, there’s just generally the dynamic of having more promotionality,” Best Buy has bounced back from product shortages during the last peak season. The CEO noted that the company is still experiencing inventory constraints in some areas, such as computing and gaming, as global chip supplies remain tight. “In our industry, it’s not as simple as we have inventory or we don’t,” Barry said. “It can be incredibly variable by product and even brands within a particular product.” Article top image credit: Courtesy of Best Buy RETAIL INVENTORY IN 2022: NORMAL IS STILL NOWHERE IN SIGHT With Target taking the vocal lead, retailers are flushing out excess inventory to reset for the holidays. How much they’ll sell then is anybody’s guess. By: Ben Unglesbee • Published July 8, 2022 If you know anyone who works in demand forecasting or inventory management for a retailer, they could maybe use a hug. These were always difficult jobs, based in no small part on the vagaries of consumers tastes, trends and various intersecting markets and economies. The pandemic era has thrown several new layers of difficulty in planning and purchasing inventory. From panic buying to supply shortfalls to historic inflation spikes, the intensity by which the environment can change is matched only by the speed of that change. Target’s shocker earlier in June highlighted how quickly the world changes. Just weeks after cutting its profit expectations for the second quarter, the retailer cut them again, dramatically. Just as importantly, the retailer signaled it was moving to clear inventory through markdowns and other measures, and would be canceling orders. It was a sign of the speed and severity of consumer changes and cost inflation. It also portended rocky days ahead for the industry as it prepares for the all-important holiday season. Retailers, brands, wholesalers and other industry players are trying to match inventory with consumer demand — whatever that will be for the season. “They’re guessing. They’re all guessing. And any one of them that tells you they’re not guessing, they’re lying, because they don’t know,” John McQuiston, managing director and global head of originations, receivables and trade finance with Wells Fargo, told Retail Dive in an interview. “The demand levels are entirely unpredictable. Consumer behavior is unpredictable. … This is a bit of a crystal ball Christmas.” ‘RAPID REVISIONS’ AT TARGET While some analysts called out Target for the planning miss, the announcement was illustrative of several things going on in this particular moment in retail. Baked into Target’s description of what it was doing and why was a kind of whiplash. Customers changed their purchasing behaviors much more quickly than the company anticipated, whether through bad luck, poor planning or some combination of the two. From Target’s past earnings call, as well as those of Walmart and other retailers, it’s clear that consumers are reacting to price inflation, particularly in food and fuel, the latter of which has skyrocketed since Russia (a major oil producer) invaded Ukraine and has exacerbated already elevated supply chain costs. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “They’re guessing. They’re all guessing. And any one of them that tells you they’re not guessing, they’re lying, because they don’t know.” John McQuiston Managing Director & Global Head of Originations, Receivables & Trade Finance, Wells Fargo -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Target’s post-earnings announcement was a sign of just how quickly consumers were changing. The retailer said at the time that it was making “rapid revisions to sales forecasts, promotional plans and cost expectations by category.” Specifically, the company cut its forecasts for discretionary categories — calling out home goods by name — while expecting strength in food, household essentials and beauty. Following Target’s announcement, Bill Kirk, managing director with MKM Partners, said in a research note that the analyst team observed “strong discounting” in a store visit to Target in discretionary sections of the store. And while Target said it is clearing inventory to help foster top-line growth — by pivoting to better-selling (if lower-margin) products — the move is not without risks beyond the profit hit. “We worry that large discounts could damage Target’s brand image: 1) part of the apparel department looked like a Ross ... store; 2) the electronics department looked like Black Friday; and 3) outdoor goods looked like it was Winter,” Kirk said in the note. “We worry that even after inventory clears, some impact could remain.” Mismatches in supply and demand, and sales and inventory levels, extend far beyond Target and cover many if not most discretionary categories. As one example, HSBC analysts said in a mid-June note they were “[b]racing for another lap of complexity” in the sporting goods sector. The “[b]iggest risk in our view is the sector moving from inventory shortages last year to a glut as early as H2 this year,” the analysts said. “With tight inventories, the sector enjoyed some gross margin support (more full-price sales); with supply chains functioning a lot more efficiently now and possibly some over-ordering, we could soon be in a situation in which inventories are larger than what the market can absorb.” BTIG analysts Camilo Lyon and Mackenzie Boydston said in a research note that they heard from retail contacts that Nike was “surprising” wholesale partners with more “at-once” orders potentially due to slowing DTC sales, thus “creating a need to place late-arriving inventory.” The analysts said the move “is surprising to us since at-once orders have been relatively rare in this supply-constrained, COVID environment as [Nike] has struggled to get back into a normalized delivery cadence.” But they also noted that “not all is dire, as retailers that have been starved for inventory are getting it, and seemingly selling through it.” ‘CANCELLATIONS, DELAYS AND MARKDOWNS’ All of this shows how an adaptation to one extreme circumstance suddenly became a disadvantage. “What happened is that the retailers started to buy a lot more in anticipation of the issues of getting goods and bringing them on shore,” Joel Wolitzer, senior vice president and business development officer with Rosenthal & Rosenthal, said in an interview with Retail Dive. “And so they were trying to backfill to compensate for the supply chain issues at the height of the pandemic. Now they have a lot of inventory that’s not moving as quickly as they would have liked.” Importers that Rosenthal & Rosenthal works with “are seeing cancellations, delays and markdowns and deductions that the retailers seem to be taking, because of this backlog,” Wolitzer said. Prediction hiccups have become endemic with the pandemic. “Retailers, right at the start of the pandemic, marked everything down because they all thought they’d be fighting off bankruptcy,” Wells Fargo’s McQuiston said. “The government then sends multi-$1,000 checks to the entire American population unexpectedly. And everybody goes out and shops and finds the stores are empty because all the merchandise has been either sent off to consolidators, or marked down and sold.” That was early in the pandemic. More recently, McQuiston noted, billions of dollars in merchandise has been sitting on boats waiting to be unloaded into warehouses and go on to shelves, while at the same time “the consumer has been tapped.” Again, prices for daily life needs — food and gasoline — are putting pressure on the vast majority of consumers who aren’t wealthy. (The wealthy, as always, have a buffer against economic travails, as does the luxury sector.) There’s another factor affecting discretionary spending along with inflation, again related to the pandemic. David Silverman, senior director at Fitch Ratings, said in emailed comments following the May retail sales figures that they showed “consumers are less interested in buying more things and instead are focusing their attention on travel, entertainment, and other services.” Some have called out retailers for not being ready for any of these various factors. “[R]etailers seemed to have taken an approach of full-bore for pandemic habits until they saw real evidence that the behavior was shifting — and, for inventory management, that’s way too late,” Nikki Baird, vice president of strategy for retail technology company Aptos, said in emailed comments. “You can’t stop a supply chain on a dime, as we already learned during the pandemic.” All that said, the attention to inventories may be overstating the issue. Jason Miller, associate professor of logistics at Michigan State University, analyzed Q1 data for six major retailers who are also major importers: Walmart, Target, Home Depot, Lowe’s, Dollar Tree and Costco. With the exception of Costco, the days to turn inventory in Q1 this year increased over 2021 and 2019 by varying degrees. But, Miller said by email that the increases “aren’t suggesting that these retailers will need to suddenly curtail a large percentage of their orders.” Miller added, “My conclusion looking at this is that while we will see retailers be more deliberate in their ordering over the coming months, we are unlikely to see a sudden sharp drop in imports.” BUT HOW BIG IS THE INVENTORY DECLINE, REALLY? With all that in mind, the holidays are going to be complicated, to say the least. Asked how retailers are planning for holiday inventory, McQuiston said they were doing so “with a great deal of emotion.” Once again, the retail world is headed into a holiday season defined by — to use a word that has been overused but unavoidable since the pandemic began — uncertainty. A safe bet, with the understanding that everything could quickly turn, is that consumer momentum won’t be what it was last holiday cycle. Fitch expects heightened promotions through the summer as retailers clear excess inventory. Silverman noted that “reduced inventory orders for the back half of the year could help overall industry health while easing some supply chain concerns.” For now, retail products are still shipping, Target’s cancelations notwithstanding. Imports in April remained at near record high volumes, according to tracking by the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates. “We’re in for a busy summer at the ports,” Jonathan Gold, NRF’s vice president for supply chain and customs policy, said in a June press release. “Back-to-school supplies are already arriving, and holiday merchandise will be right behind them.” Government data pulled by Michigan State’s Miller also shows import levels well above 2019 levels in April (by 37%, according to Miller’s analysis). “What I want to emphasize is that there is no precedence beyond a monumental economic calamity (e.g., the original COVID shutdowns, the Great Recession) for sharp drops in volumes,” Miller said. But whether retailers will be able to sell all the goods coming in today is the big question. And with freight, fuel and labor costs elevated for retailers, the pressure is on those doing the purchasing and inventory planning in a market that continues to defy prediction. “There’s a lot of noise out there with inflation and rising [interest] rates,” Wolitzer said. “If retailers are able to flush out some of the non-performing goods, they’ll make room for strong purchases for the holiday season. But there’s only so much room on the floor and in their warehouses to take merchandise in. Which is why importers are facing delays or cancellations.” Article top image credit: Courtesy of South Carolina Ports Authority HOW GROCERS ARE MANAGING THE TWIN PRESSURES OF SUPPLY CHAIN DISRUPTION AND INFLATION Companies need to be particularly “agile” in 2022, one expert said, as high demand and shortages can make inflation appear quickly. By: Jeff Wells • Published Jan. 31, 2022 Like grocers across the country, Karns Foods in Pennsylvania is grappling with rising prices and a rotating cast of supply chain shortages. That lack of control has been tough to swallow for Scott Karns, the 10-store company’s chief executive. “We order 2,000 cases and we might get 1,200,” he said. “It’s very frustrating for our customers to explain to them why they can’t get exactly the flavors and the sizes they want.” The company is managing as best it can, Karns said. To combat price increases, Karns’ stores are stocking their aisles with more private label products, which offer lower price points. To deal with supply shortages, managers are buying surplus quantities of items like toilet paper and pasta sauce when they can and offering shoppers a limited assortment in strained categories. Karns said the company is also planning to source more products locally, including pork, which used to come from a Midwest supplier and now comes from an in-state one. In May, the grocer planned to source around two-thirds of its beef supply from a handful of local farms that will exclusively supply Karns’ stores. A local Angus farm that supplies beef to Karns Foods. Courtesy of Karns Foods Karns noted shoppers have rolled with the changes, but he’s not sure how long that will last. “The basket is going to get more expensive as the year goes on,” he said. Retailers are nervously watching their shoppers as rising prices and out-of-stocks continue to plague their aisles. According to recent news reports and interviews, the main impact of these prolonged disruptions to date has been shoppers buying lower-priced items and grumbling about empty shelves. But loyal consumers could reach a tipping point later this year, companies fear, and switch to stores that offer better prices or different products. During its third-quarter earnings call, Albertsons executives noted the pressure competitors put on any decisions the grocer makes around pricing, and said that while its shopper loyalty is “strong” right now, the company is remaining watchful. In an Ipsos survey of 1,000 consumers released in early December, 45% reported buying items from a store other than their primary grocer at least once a month thanks to supply strains or a poor online ordering experience. Eighteen percent of households with kids said they’ve changed to another primary grocer because of these factors. “There’s enough competition out there that consumers are changing their behaviors if what they need isn’t in stock,” said Mike Murphy, a vice president with Ipsos. Krishnakumar Davey, president of client engagement with IRI, said the research firm is monitoring consumer elasticity, which measures shoppers sensitivity to price changes, “extremely closely.” After a period of low elasticity earlier in the pandemic, when stimulus checks, child tax credits and at-home lockdowns fueled higher spending, that metric has started to rise to pre-COVID levels in many categories, he said. As of early January, breakfast meats and coffee were showing price sensitivity in line with those seen before the global health crisis, while hot cereal and candy were showing higher elasticity than pre-COVID, Davey said. Across many categories, consumer elasticity is still lower than before the pandemic, Davey said, suggesting retailers have room to pass along price increases from suppliers, which have been hit with higher wages, shipping disruptions and other pressures. But retailers are concerned that the end of federal aid programs, like the expanded child tax credit that expired at the end of 2021, coupled with prices rising at a faster clip, could magnify consumers’ frustrations. Food-at-home prices rose 6.5% last year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and manufacturers are passing along additional increases beginning this month. IRI projects prices will rise an average of 5% in the first half of this year. “What [retailers] are apprehensive about is that some of the stimulus is drying out, and price increases are going through a lot more this year than last year,” Davey said. “They’re saying we know that people like to eat at home, but people can substitute.” -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “We order 2,000 cases and we might get 1,200. It’s very frustrating for our customers to explain to them why they can’t get exactly the flavors and the sizes they want.” Scott Karns CEO, Karns Foods -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- STAYING ‘AGILE’ AMID PRICE INCREASES Although the root causes of inflation are beyond retailers’ control, there are ways to effectively manage these price increases, experts said. Executives at Albertsons and other grocers have spoken about holding back increases on essential goods and key items while letting them flow through on more discretionary purchases. Davey said IRI’s scan data shows grocers are keeping down prices on fresh goods like milk, eggs and meat and increasing prices across center store categories. They’re also pulling back on price promotions due to supply shortages and other challenges. He said that, percentage-wise, the center store price increases appear relatively the same across discount, mass and traditional retailers — which is somewhat surprising, Davey said, as he expected low-price retailers to hold back in an effort to win over comparison shoppers. But that could soon change. Davey said retailers that are able to push personalized coupons and other promotions to price-sensitive shoppers are doing so. “Right now, I think the main strategy is to give the discount to the buyers who need it,” he said. Winn-Dixie is lowering prices on more than 150 of its “most-shopped” items. Courtesy of Winn-Dixie Steve Bishop, managing partner and co-founder of consulting firm Brick Meets Click, said retailers are using technology to spot price gaps and identify high-value items where they should be price competitive. Companies need to be particularly “agile” in 2022, he said, because the combination of high demand on certain items and supply shortages can make inflation appear quickly anywhere in the store. “In the coming year, it will be even more important to change prices quickly to minimize any price vulnerability from higher prices that negatively impact sales or lower prices that negatively impact profit,” he wrote in an email. A value-price image can go a long way, sources said, even if prices overall have gone up. Marco Di Marino, director of consulting firm AlixPartners’ retail and grocery division, said retailers are making selective price cuts and promoting key items where they’ve kept inflation from trickling in. Retailers are also adding more store brands and value-priced items to their shelves, said Di Marino. Krasdale Foods, which offers distribution and marketing services to independent retailers in New York and New Jersey, is seeing higher private label demand from retailers it serves, said Dennis Hickey, chief merchandising officer with the company. But Krasdale’s private label suppliers are struggling with the same supply-chain shortages national brands face — like shortages of tin and other raw materials — meaning sometimes they don’t have the products in stock. Many of the retailers Krasdale works with are in the New York City area, where there aren’t many discount players like Walmart. That’s helped stores hold onto customers, he said, though companies are still carefully watching shoppers’ behavior. “We’re keeping a very close eye on trip frequency,” Hickey said. LEARNING TO DO MORE WITH LESS Retailers learned early in the pandemic how to deal with supply shortages and communicate those to shoppers. The omicron variant, however, has once again accelerated out-of-stocks that are often impossible to predict as suppliers and distributors contend with worker absences and other challenges. Executives are hopeful supplies will normalize beginning in February, after omicron has ebbed. Until then, retailers like Go Grocer in Chicago are having to limit their assortment and shuttle goods between stores to fill in product gaps. Gregory Stellatos, co-founder and co-owner of the Chicago-based chain, said all the supply shuffling during the pandemic has made shoppers less brand loyal. “During this time, I think private label and emerging brands are the two winners,” he said. Optional Caption Mario Tama via Getty Images Hickey, meanwhile, said independent retailers have had to be very resourceful in order to get the supplies they need. They’re cutting assortments by nearly half in some areas, he said. If Krasdale doesn’t have an item they need, he said, they’ll find another way to get it. “Instead of carrying 25 flavors of Ocean Spray juice, they may be down to 15 or 16,” he said. “They’re spread out a little more, and maybe they’ve changed their allocations, but our retailers will go anywhere to get product when they need to fill shelves.” Karns said shoppers at his stores have responded so well to limited assortments that he’s planning to continue the strategy long-term. “How many sizes of Hidden Valley Ranch do we really need?” he said. The supply chain squeeze over the past two years has prompted Karns to make other long-term changes. After years of contemplating starting its own beef supply line, the grocer finally got started a year ago. It partnered with a local farm-management organization and is now overseeing Angus cattle operations at 15 family farms across six counties. Karns Pennsylvania Preferred Beef selections will hit stores in May, Karns said, and have their own dedicated section. All told, the operation will account for around 70% of the grocer’s beef needs, and could get close to 80% after adding several more farms. He said the new line will carry prices that are equal to its current beef selections. “I can go out and visit the herds, which is something I’ve never been able to do in my 40 years in the supermarket business,” Karns said. Article top image credit: Mario Tama via Getty Images CAR PARTS SUPPLIER LOADS UP ON INVENTORY AS JUST-IN-TIME DELIVERY LOSES APPEAL Companies that have what customers want when they want it are the ones coming out on top in this environment, a CarParts.com executive said. By: Maura Webber Sadovi • Published Jan. 24, 2022 CarParts.com’s CFO-COO David Meniane is one of an increasing number of financial executives bulking up inventory and pushing back on the long-time trend toward just-in-time lean inventory management. The e-commerce company’s inventory, which focuses on gaskets and brakes and other parts for car owners, has risen to $131.7 million as of the third quarter, nearly 3x the size it was before the pandemic in December 2019, according to SEC filings. Meniane believes the approach has helped grow the company’s market. The company expected a 33% increase in sales to $582 million in fiscal 2021 compared to the year-earlier. “In this environment [just-in-time] doesn’t work. The longer the lead time, the less reliable the supply chain, the more inventory you have to carry,” he told CFO Dive. Otherwise “we lose the sale to whoever has inventory and is more aggressive.” David Meniane Courtesy of CarParts.com Meniane is part of a surge of companies that have reconsidered their leaner approaches to supply chains as clogged ports, soaring container costs and scarcity has led to bare shelves and threatened sales. Lean inventory management, or just-in-time inventory planning, is the practice of trying to match inventory level to consumer demand and it has taken hold in recent decades, with U.S. companies adopting a method that Toyota is often credited with. AGAINST THE GRAIN Loading up on inventory is a concept that Meniane agrees goes against the instinct of CFOs to optimize returns and reduce carrying costs, but he sees it as necessary now, although it’s likely “transitory,” he said. Lean inventory management will come back into vogue again, probably by 2023, he said. “I think it’s going to ease up in the next two years. As lead times compress, you’re going to see more firms having less inventory.” His hope is that his firm will ultimately have less inventory but maintain higher sales. Meniane arrived at the company, formerly known as U.S. Auto Parts Network, in 2019 after spending nearly three years as executive vice president of L.A. Libations and prior to that about six years as CEO of Victoria’s Kitchen. Since he joined, the company has pursued a strategy focused on building a streamlined vertically integrated supply chain, which puts the inventory closer to the customer for a competitive advantage. As part of the new strategy the company, which gained a tailwind during the pandemic as customers flocked to online shopping, has been investing in its real estate and technology, both designed to help it control its future rather than rely on other vendors or outsourcing. CarParts.com has gone from having two distribution centers in 2019 to six, helping to reduce the average time that products get to customers to 1-2 days — down from an average delivery time of nine days three years ago. In addition, the company has invested in AI, machine learning, tools and software. It has also hired a 12-person forecasting and data science team to examine trends in inventory, freight and labor management and pricing. Among their immediate tasks: use technology to identify trends that signal which products he needs more or less of with the goal of ultimately moving to an era of leaner inventory. “We’re building a system based on machine learning and artificial intelligence and when lead times start compressing we’ll get our capital back,” he said. Article top image credit: Spencer Platt via Getty Images JUST-IN-TIME AND SAFETY STOCK REQUIRE A CAREFUL BALANCE Over the course of the pandemic, inventory has gone up, but so have sales. Are companies rethinking lean or just trying to keep up with demand? By: Matt Leonard • Published Nov. 10, 2021 Empty grocery store shelves in April 2020 and bare car dealerships in 2021 led to a lot of finger pointing. And much of the blame fell on lean inventory or just-in-time supply chain management. Industries have worked for decades to cut costs by lowering inventory levels. But it requires a careful balance. Inventory that’s too low means lost sales when consumers can’t find the item they want to buy. The empty shelves during the pandemic served as a wake-up call for businesses to carry more safety stock. A Gartner survey published this year showed some interest among supply chain professionals in increasing safety stock. Still, others say the benefits of just-in-time are just too good for companies to give up on the practice. And a look at some large companies’ inventory levels shows that while they are higher in many cases, the companies have actually managed to return to a normal level when it comes to inventory as a percentage of sales. This simply means inventory has gone up, but so have sales, and companies are trying to keep up rather than build safety stock. INVENTORY BUILD-UP OR A RETURN TO NORMAL? Second-quarter inventory as a percentage of net sales* Take Walmart as an example. The value of inventory the retailer reported in July was 6% higher than it was during the same quarter in 2019, but its sales had increased more than 8%. Its inventory as a percentage of sales was back to where it was in 2019 — with less than 1% difference — after falling more than 4 percentage points from 2019 to 2020. In this context, Walmart’s inventory buildup seems less like a buildup and more like an attempt to keep up. Still, executives at the retailer have also said they would like inventory levels to be higher than they currently are. “We were happy to report in the second quarter that we had a lot more inventory than a year ago,” Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said at an analyst conference in September. “In 2020, at the end of the second quarter, we were way too light in stores and on the e-commerce side. So we would take even more inventory if we could get it, especially in some categories.” Every company has been affected differently, though. Hasbro has had a hard time keeping its inventory afloat amid high demand. Sales surged more than 34% compared to 2019, but inventory is down 11% compared to the same period, which has led to its inventory as a percentage of sales dropping 20 percentage points. “We’re ... working to ensure product availability during the holiday season,” Hasbro CFO Deb Thomas said on the company’s last earnings call. “We may experience some shifts in delivery dates and timing of revenue, but we’re leveraging our global footprint and scale to meet demand.” JUST-IN-TIME: TIME TO SHINE OR RETHINK? Lean inventory management or just-in-time inventory planning has been a way of thinking within the supply chain management world for decades, with Toyota often credited with pioneering the method. The automaker famously redesigned its supply chain after it experienced issues following a 2011 earthquake. In fact, Japan adopted lean practices a full decade before companies in the U.S., John Dalton, an economics professor at Wake Forest University, noted in a 2013 research paper. The idea, which U.S. companies began to adopt, is simple: Businesses want to try and match their level of inventory to consumer demand as closely as possible. In a well-oiled supply chain, manufacturers can meet fluctuations in demand, and theoretically sell more while reducing inventory carrying costs, Dalton wrote. But as the pandemic swept around the globe, bare shelves had people questioning the practice. With the global supply chain strained under the weight of the pandemic, the Biden administration set out to understand what was going wrong. A 250-page report released in June outlines some of its findings — and it points a finger at just-in-time. The report from the Biden administration said just-in-time supply chain management increased risk in industries from auto manufacturing to drug making, as it reduced safety stock and companies’ ability to quickly adapt to upticks demand. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “We would take even more inventory if we could get it.” Doug McMillon Walmart CEO -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “In contrast to early projections, vehicle demand recovered much more quickly than expected in the second half of 2020,” the report reads. “This sharp rebound impacted the auto industry in part due to its just-in-time supply chains and limited visibility into upstream suppliers. When auto parts suppliers returned to place orders for chips to meet the unanticipated surge in vehicle demand, semiconductor manufacturers had reportedly already utilized spare capacity to produce chips for electronics devices.” Biden touched on this reality again recently, addressing port congestion and supply chain challenges more generally. “Prior to the crisis, we shared the focus on lean efficient supply chains, leaving no buffer or margin for error when it comes to certain parts arriving just in time is needed to make a final product,” he said during a recent press conference. He went on to note that there needed to be an investment in increased resilience without specifying what this would consist of. A NEW ERA OF SUPPLY CHAIN PLANNING From the outside looking in, it appears that just-in-time supply chains have caused more problems than they’ve solved over the last year. But companies still seem interested in adopting the practice, experts said. Paul Lord, a senior director analyst at Gartner, said he’s fielded almost 10 calls over two to three months about companies that want to work toward a just-in-time supply chain. “So the aspiration hasn’t gone away, at least not completely,” Lord said. Dan Hearsch, a managing director in the automotive and industrial practice at AlixPartners, agreed that the interest in lean inventory has not waned among corporate supply chain planners. There could be some changes to supply chains going forward. “I think the changes will largely be represented in the safety stock calculation,” Hearsch said. This will mean keeping more inventory of what manufacturers consider critical components. Figuring out what exactly will be considered critical will be an “art” for many companies and the definition will likely be broader than it was a couple of years ago, he said. Part of the calculus is the number of alternative suppliers a component has. An example of a non-critical component would be polypropylene as it has a lot of different suppliers available, while something like xenon headlights have fewer suppliers and are closer to the critical end of the spectrum, Hearsch said. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “Prior to the crisis, we shared the focus on lean efficient supply chains, leaving no buffer or margin for error.” Joe Biden President of the United States -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Companies might agree to order one or two years of stock from a supplier rather than 12 to 14 weeks to help ensure they have the products available. That doesn’t change the just-in-time delivery aspect of the component, Hearsch said. The issue with committing to that much inventory is it cuts down on a manufacturer’s flexibility. “The supply chain planner is forced to compensate for shortcomings in agility, and resilience with additional inventory,” Lord said. And that’s why, in reality, just-in-time has been and will always be an aspiration, Lord said. Uncertain lead times, squeezed shipping capacity and manufacturing shutdowns during the pandemic exposed the need for buffer inventories. “When things get out of balance, you won’t be able to predict and count on what you can and can’t get,” Hearsch said. “So you’re gonna have to plan in a selfish manner.” Article top image credit: Sean Gallup via Getty Images WHAT THE FUTURE OF INVENTORY MANAGEMENT LOOKS LIKE As economic conditions change, so do inventory management strategies. Few industries showcase this better than the retail industry. Long term, businesses across industries are rethinking what it means to have lean inventory on the balance sheet and safety stock to meet sales. INCLUDED IN THIS TRENDLINE * Off-price retailers shift tactics as inventory gluts squeeze the industry * Retailers take expensive measures to clear inventory ahead of peak season * Best Buy bucks the glut trend, boasting healthy inventory Our Trendlines go deep on the biggest trends. These special reports, produced by our team of award-winning journalists, help business leaders understand how their industries are changing. Davide Savenije Editor-in-Chief at Industry Dive. 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