Today's Logistics Report: Amazon's Investing Strategy; Bending Metal Tariffs; Retooling Supply Chains
24 Julho 2020 - 10:59AM
Dow Jones News
By Paul Page
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The walls between Amazon.com Inc.'s venture-capital investment
fund and its commercial business don't appear to be very high.
Entrepreneurs, investors and deal advisers say in interviews that
Amazon has appeared to use the investment and deal-making process
to help develop competing products, the WSJ's Dana Mattioli and
Cara Lombardo report. In some cases, Amazon's decision to launch a
competing product devastated the business in which it invested. In
other cases, Amazon met with startups about potential takeovers,
studied their technology, then declined to invest and later
introduced similar Amazon-branded products. Amazon says it doesn't
use confidential information from companies to build competing
products. The e-commerce giant is facing scrutiny in Washington
over whether it unfairly uses its size and platform against
competitors and third-party sellers. Amazon has the money and
appetite and for innovation that attracts entrepreneurs, but it
looks like dealing with Amazon can be a double-edged sword.
QUOTABLE
ECONOMY & TRADE
U.S. tariffs on imported aluminum are triggering a rift in the
metal's domestic supply chain. Aluminum customers are getting
exclusions from the levies on billions of pounds of imported metal,
the WSJ's Bob Tita reports, prompting protests from operators of
U.S. mills who say the actions undermine the domestic market that
the duties were supposed to revive. The exclusions granted by the
Commerce Department have grown this year as manufacturers of
aluminum cans and other packaging have claimed they can't get
products like particular types of rolled sheet metal that they need
from domestic suppliers. Aluminum producers say imports are
growing, however, and helping drive down their pricing and margins.
Both sides are being buffeted by changing consumer tastes, which
have prompted new products and packaging, a commercial trend that
appears to be outpacing the Commerce Department's attempt to
intercede in aluminum markets.
SUPPLY CHAIN STRATEGIES
Rapidly retooling its supply chain is paying off for Unilever
PLC. The consumer-goods supplier aggressively expanded its
previously small hand-sanitizer business, the WSJ's Saabira
Chaudhuri reports, and emerged from a tumultuous second quarter
with profits and revenues largely intact despite dramatic shifts in
its business lines. Unilever's sales at its restaurant-focused
food-service arm declined nearly 40% over the first six months of
the year. The company combined its global scale with a swift
response to the coronavirus-driven lockdowns and upheaval in
consumer demand, expanding manufacturing sites making sanitizer
from just two to more than 60. It pushed monthly production from
about 700,000 units of sanitizer to around 100 million units by
repurposing manufacturing lines and in one case kitting out a
factory in Vietnam in just 25 days. With forecasts for consumer
markets still uncertain, the supplier will have to remain just as
nimble for the foreseeable future.
IN OTHER NEWS
A purchasing managers survey shows eurozone economic activity
rose in July at the fastest pace in more than two years. (WSJ)
Filings by Americans for weekly unemployment benefits rose for
the first time in nearly four months. (WSJ)
Second-quarter profit at warehousing giant Prologis Inc. rose
5.4% to $404.5 million as net effective rent jumped 22%.
(MarketWatch)
Blackstone Group Inc. is buying a nearly $1 billion
infrastructure investment portfolio from Alaska Permanent Fund.
(WSJ)
American Airlines Group Inc. will pare back flights again after
restoring operations at an aggressive pace earlier this summer.
(WSJ)
U.S. regulators suggest broader reporting requirements for
meatpacking companies as they investigate pricing gyrations in
cattle markets. (WSJ)
Ann Taylor and Lane Bryant parent Ascena Retail Group Inc. filed
for bankruptcy with plans to close roughly 1,100 stores. (WSJ)
Coal miner Rhino Resource Partners filed for bankruptcy
protection with a plan to sell its business to lenders. (WSJ)
Quarterly sales at rural lifestyle retailer Tractor Supply Co.
rose 35% and net income jumped 54.5%. (WSJ)
Intel Corp.'s second-quarter profit rose 22% but the
semiconductor maker signaled a delay in its development of
superfast chips. (WSJ)
Hershey Co. says subdued Halloween celebrations as a result of
the coronavirus pandemic could hurt candy demand. (WSJ)
Ford Motor Co. says a protest blocking rail traffic in northern
Mexico is affecting nearby factory operations and hindering
cross-border shipments. (Reuters)
Supply-chain backlogs are pushing deliveries of Whirlpool Corp.
appliances out as long as six months. (Bloomberg)
Autonomous truck maker TuSimple has minimal revenues that fall
far short of the company's earlier projections. (The
Information)
Alternative-fuel truck maker Nikola Corp. broke ground on a
factory in Arizona. (Barron's)
Paccar's North American Class 8 truck deliveries fell to 9,300
in the second quarter from 30,000 a year ago. (Transport Dive)
Several cargo vessels are anchored in quarantine off Hong Kong
after crew members infected with Covid-19 were found on board.
(Lloyd's List)
Maersk Line will start charging shippers that make manual
booking and documentation amendments starting Sept. 1. (Journal of
Commerce)
Cargo throughput at the Port of Rotterdam fell 9.1% in the first
half of 2020, including a 7.1% drop in container volume. (Port
Technology)
Autonomous shipping technology provider Sea Machines Robotics
raised $15 million in a Series B funding round. (VentureBeat)
Union Pacific Corp. is calling furloughed employees back to work
after rail volumes began improving during the second quarter.
(Associated Press)
CSX Corp. second-quarter volumes fell 25% but recovered strongly
in June. (Jacksonville Daily Record)
Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. trimmed its operating ratio as
cost cuts helped offset a 12% drop in second-quarter volume. (Globe
and Mail)
DHL Express will have Boeing Co. convert four 767-300 passenger
jets to freighter configuration as it accelerates a capacity
expansion. (The Loadstar)
A San Francisco produce-delivery entrepreneur known as "Fruit
Jesus" pivoted to home delivery after demand from corporate
customers evaporated during lockdown. (SFGate)
ABOUT US
Paul Page is editor of WSJ Logistics Report. Follow the WSJ
Logistics Report team: @PaulPage , @jensmithWSJ and @CostasParis.
Follow the WSJ Logistics Report on Twitter at @WSJLogistics.
Write to Paul Page at paul.page@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 24, 2020 09:44 ET (13:44 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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