Hawaii consumers advised to shop early due to shipping, supply issues

Oct. 31—If you think it's too early to shop for the holidays, take some advice from Hawaii retailers who began ordering their holiday inventory as early as January in anticipation of supply-chain and shipping problems and are still waiting for their full orders to arrive.

Their message to holiday shoppers : If you see it, buy it. Now.

"If you wait until Christmas, it might be sold out by then or they may not have the color or model you want, " said Retail Merchants of Hawaii President Tina Yamaki.

Small businesses had to order merchandise "extra early, " she said, yet items they expected to receive in the summer are only now arriving.

Although container ships are not clogging Hawaii's harbors like at some West Coast ports, local businesses and consumers are far from immune to supply-­chain disruptions and increased costs this gift-giving season. In fact, as an island state, Hawaii is far more vulnerable to shipping hikes than the contiguous U.S., and shoppers here can expect the holidays to be more expensive than last year.

"We anticipated this supply-chain problem back in March and April, so we started loading up early, " said Brad Ishii, owner of Thinker Toys and Thinker Things stores in Hawaii for 24 years. "We're bringing all our products in now."

He said he was tipped off to the impending problems in March by manufacturers at a gift show in Las Vegas.

"They were telling me, 'You need to order now, '" due to the shortage of raw materials from China, the rise in container shipping costs and the logjam of ships at Los Angeles and Long Beach ports.

"Since we're smaller, we were able to pivot quicker and get the products in as quick as possible " using a freight forwarder, Ishii said, as opposed to large retail chains such as Target and Walmart that bring in large containers of goods.

Fortunately, Hawaii's harbors are not dealing with the same problems as the California ports where container ships are waiting offshore to be unloaded. Retailers say they are receiving goods as they arrive since there is no backlog or delays at the ports and there's an adequate number of truck drivers to move products.

"There are currently no delays or congestion at Honolulu Harbor, " the state Department of Transportation said.

This is because the major shipping lines that serve Hawaii generally work their vessels at their own facilities on the West Coast, according to the DOT, and the size of vessels that sail to Hawaii are smaller than the majority of ships calling on the mainland ports, "meaning less time needed to work these vessels."