Furniture Watchdog

Furniture prices soar due to supply chain issues, increased cost of materials

prunman
Publish date: Sun, 16 Jan 2022, 10:13 PM

Furniture prices soar due to supply chain issues, increased cost of materials
 

The cost of furniture is climbing and shipping times are exponentially longer as manufacturers face significant cost increases for materials, supply shortages and longer wait times to get those materials.

Rick Ripoli, president of Stylus Made To Order Sofas based in Burnaby, B.C., says in his 40 years in the manufacturing and wholesale business, he's never seen prices increase and supply chain issues quite like what he's seeing now.

Nearly every raw material needed to make a piece in the Burnaby factory is more expensive, he says; in some cases, with a 35 per cent increase month over month. Additionally, there are supply shortages.

Ripoli says a container shipped from Asia in 2019 used to cost $1,800. Today, he pays upwards of $20,000 per container filled with materials.

 

Ripoli says he usually increases the price of sofas once a year, but in 2021 he had to increase prices six times to keep up with the cost of manufacturing.

He expects those cost increases to continue through 2022.

Those additional costs get passed on to customers.

Rick Bohonis, a retail consultant with DIG360 and co-founder of Urban Barn, says there are many factors behind the cost increases, including the temporary workplace shutdowns in early 2020, tariffs imposed by Canada last year, and supply issues.

Consumers can expect at least a 10 to 15 per cent price tag increase on furniture in the short term, but in coming months, he expects prices to climb even more.

"Those prices are going to continue to rise just because furniture companies will no longer sit on the price increase to them without passing it on to the consumer," he said.

 

IKEA has announced it will be raising prices about nine per cent, although some parts of the world could see slightly higher increases. The company says its biggest cost increases are due to transportation costs and prices for raw materials in North America and Europe.

"Unfortunately, now, for the first time since higher costs have begun to affect the global economy, we have to pass parts of those increased costs on to our customers," Tolga Öncü, retail operations manager with IKEA Retail said in a press release.

 

Shipping taking longer

In addition to paying more, getting the product into your home is also taking longer.

Ripoli says it used to take three to five weeks to deliver a sofa to a customer from the time they ordered. Now, the timeline is about six months.

"All we talk about is how we can get products to our customers quicker," Ripoli said.

He says if they take an order in August and it's scheduled for delivery in February, the cost of the product will likely increase, and the company's margins, therefore, go down.

In many cases he estimates margins are eroded by up to 12 per cent.

"Hopefully we can get our delivery times down," he said.

Article originated from: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/furniture-prices-soar-supply-chain-issues-1.6314733

 

My two cents

In my humble opinion, the tech rally on a global scale had to take a rest, regardless of investors strong conviction, or not, onto their multi year growth prospects. Fund flows however, are heading towards invisible winners behind the inflationary mega theme. One of the best examples for the beneficiary would be midstream wood supplier who can perfectly transfer costs to their client, which is SERN KOU RESOURCES and EVERGREEN FIBREBOARD respectively.

As you can see, the two are trailing closely while the technology sector had dipped. Now, it is best to switch your funds before the price ramp up even further. I had been calling investors to take note on SERN KOU since they are 60 cents, and I'm fairly confident that this is just the beginning.

Cheers.