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U.S. imports surge as pandemic worries have retailers stockpiling

Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in New Jersey

By Lisa Baertlein

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Los Angeles-based maker of Exploding Kittens and Throw Throw Burrito board games ordered 1 million extra units from its factory in China with the hope of preventing coronavirus from ruining its Christmas sales.

The move from the company, which sells product through Target <TGT.>, Walmart <WMT.N>, and Amazon.com <AMZN.O>, comes as U.S. suppliers and retailers have been rebuilding depleted inventories and battling uncertainty by stockpiling pandemic sellers such as toys, refrigerators, home furnishings and booze.

In the last few months, "I started getting the games out of China as fast as possible," said Carly McGinnis, chief operating officer at Exploding Kittens.

U.S. imports leapt 5.9% to a record in August, the first year-over-year rise since September 2019, according Panjiva, the supply chain research unit of S&P Global Market Intelligence. It said imports of household appliances jumped 79.7%, and furniture imports increased 38.1%, fueled by orders from retailers like IKEA and Target.

The Port of Los Angeles, the nation's busiest seaport, unloaded thousands of containers from seven unscheduled cargo ships in August.

President Donald Trump's trade war with China makes many imports costlier, but retailers said they don't want to risk running out of merchandise if COVID-19 infections upend supply chains again.

Chicago-area retailer Abt Electronics is snapping up brand-name refrigerators from suppliers in countries like South Korea and building reserves of flat-screen TVs.

Appliance makers are still catching up from factory closures earlier this year, said co-President Mike Abt, who is carrying about 20% more of those items than last year.

"My inventory is up, finally, in appliances but my business is up more" because stay-at-home recommendations mean refrigerators, stoves, and washing machines get more use, Abt said.

The family-owned retailer also has 27% more flat-screen TVs in stock.

"What if we have another spike in COVID cases and things lock back down again this fall?" said Tim Jordan, who sells home decor products on Amazon. He is trying to get six months' worth of inventory, versus his typical three.

At the port serving the greater New York area, shipments linked to IKEA soared 380%, while those for spirits maker Diageo <DGE.L> and cosmetics group L'Oreal <OREP.PA> rose 91% and 25.5%, respectively, Panjiva said. IKEA, Target, Diageo and L'Oreal, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The holiday lineup at Walmart includes evergreen products for homebound shoppers: loungewear, outdoor grills, pet beds, laptop computers, and exercise equipment. The world's biggest retailer did not immediately respond to a question about details of import strategy.

Many large retailers are starting holiday promotions before Halloween as a hedge against upheavals that could cause consumers to snap wallets shut.

Exploding Kittens' McGinnis, who will launch a new title on Oct. 4 as part of Target's holiday toy promotion, said her biggest worry is running out of games.

(Additional reporting by Jonathan Saulin London and Melissa Fares in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)