Shipping

West Coast Slowdowns Affect Holiday Season Shipments

Over the past two months, freight shipping has been slowed down in Los Angeles and Long Beach ports. Shipments have been stuck outside theses ports, some even waiting days before getting the chance to dock. The delays have only gotten worse over the past month, and many factors are blamed for the slow movement of shipments. Large ship sizes straining capacity of the ports, increasingly large amounts of goods, shortage of trucks to haul cargo, and changes in the local rail traffic.

LTL Volumes On the Rise

According to Estes, the nationwide LTL carrier, a stronger US economy is leading to stronger earnings and a busier season for LTL carriers. Estes is the largest privately-held LTL trucking company in the United States and the sixth largest LTL carrier overall. Their management is so confident that the strong numbers will continue, that the company purchased 980 tractors this summer.

What the GlobalForwarding.com Team Loves Most

This week, we'd like to share a few things that we love at Global Forwarding:
 

Holiday Delays & How They Can Hurt Your Supply Chain

As November approaches, so do some of the most observed holidays of the year. It's important to consider how service delays will impact the delivery dates of freight that you might be shipping to customers, or having delivered to you from your suppliers. Many LTL carriers observe Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays with complete or partial closures of their networks. This can include trucks, service centers, linehauls and more. In addition, when holidays border weekends, substantial delays can occur.

Inbound Freight

Does your company have inbound shipments coming from your suppliers? Whether coming from domestic or international points, allowing your vendors to arrange for shipping while they bill you can be probelmatic and costly. When your suppliers know that they're billing their customers for shipping, they are usually not very motivated to make sure their rates are as low as possible. Often, we talk to companies who say that their vendors include freight charges - but rest assured that they are simply building the cost of the freight into the goods you're buying.

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