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Homeward Bound?

By Home Furnishings Business in on July 2012

Domestic manufacturers believe retailers looking to keep inventories under control and rising production costs in Asia have created a window of opportunity for their products, particularly in case goods.

Last year, domestic wood shipments increased 2.5 percent, while imports fell 2.2 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce. While the first quarter of 2012 saw import wood growth of 5.8 percent outstrip domestic€™s 2.3 percent growth, last year marked a change.

And vendors are gearing up to meet anticipated increase in demand for domestic goods. In January, bedroom furniture maker Vaughan-Bassett announced an $8 million investment in its Galax, Va., manufacturing operation aimed at increasing capacity by 50 percent. And at April High Point Market, American Drew introduced three collections under its Heritage Home umbrella, each with bedroom slated for production in the United States.

BEHIND THE NUMBERS
Jerry Epperson, managing director, Mann Armistead & Epperson, Richmond, Va., said the domestic gains were impressive because imports were so strong the year before.

€œIn 2011 we saw domestic gains in wood and upholstery that exceeded import growth, but the year prior import wood was up 14 percent and import upholstery was up 13 percent,€ he said. €œIf you look at the fourth quarter, (import) upholstery was already bouncing back.€

In upholstery, Epperson noted China still dominates leather.

€œThe Chinese own the leather market except for the high-end or custom business, which mostly remains with Italy or the U.S.,€ he said. €œThey€™re making the long production runs with leather. Seventy percent of total Chinese upholstery here is leather.€

He thinks U.S.-made wood shipments will continue to grow, but it€™s going to be mainly the re-emergence of existing facilities and filling production there versus opening new factories.

€œUpholstery isn€™t as capital intensive as wood, and you can open an upholstery plant pretty quickly,€ he noted. €œIt doesn€™t have a lot of the OSHA and EPA rules wood has.€

RETAILERS€™ TAKE
With so much wood production going offshore in the past decade, can retailers count on a steady stream of domestic goods? It hasn€™t been a problem at Acton, Mass.-based Circle Furniture.
€œOur niche has always focused on domestic goods,€ said Richard Tubman, CEO. €œEkornes would be the big exception.€
As a higher-end retailer, he noted that Circle€™s at an advantage when it comes to sourcing domestically.
€œIn the better end, we have a lot of Vermont and New Hampshire manufacturers that are small but have very good product,€ Tubman said. €œIf we went after lower price points, we would have a harder time filling the floor. To at least some of our customers, and hopefully a lot, made in America is very important.€
Imports might dominate middle price points for wood, but cash-strapped retailers at those levels such as Woody Whichard at Midtown Furniture & Mattress Superstore are taking a harder look at domestic goods.
There are two reasons, said Whichard, owner of the Madison, N.C., store, and one has to do with the front end.
€œThe consumer is coming in asking where the products made a lot more than they did six years or so ago,€ he said. €œThey make a point of asking our salespeople€”it€™s a lot more important to them now. A few years ago, everyone was doing well and as long as the price was right we were all happy. Things are tougher now, and there really is a sense that they want to keep things in America.€
And domestic is easier on Whichard€™s pocket book and easier to flow.
€œOn the back end, right now I can€™t afford to buy in containers,€ Whichard said. €œBringing in 10 or 12 of one suite just isn€™t feasible for a one-store operation.
€œAlso, I haven€™t been able to free up the capital to make that big purchase, and lately the pricing hasn€™t been much better.€
Two years ago, an import suite comparable to a Vaughan-Bassett group wholesaling for $800 had a landed cost of $550 for Whichard. Landed containers of those groups now run him $600 to $650.
He€™s seen similar increases for Midtown€™s imported promotional goods, where the extra cost has a bigger impact on margins than more expensive product.
€œThe domestic producers have maintained their price structure while the imports are increasing,€ Whichard said. €œI have lower overhead on storage with domestic goods. Vaughan-Bassett has no minimum order, and our minimum for Harden is $1,200. Right now cans are costing me $12,000 to $15,000. The turnaround on domestic cases is two to three weeks, and import turnaround is 45 to 90 days.€
That said, Midtown doesn€™t carry a whole slew of domestic case goods.
€œVaughan-Bassett is the only (domestic case company) I€™m using at my middle price points,€ he said. €œThey€™ll retail up to $3,699 to $3,899 for suites. I use Harden on my promotional end€”those groups retail around $499.€

GEARING UP
Lincolnton Furniture, Lincolnton, N.C., has developed a niche in solid wood furniture using traditional joinery produced on state-of-the-art machinery. President and CEO Bruce Cochrane likes the company€™s prospects. He believes domestic producers have a chance to steal a march as importers adjust to changes in Asian source countries, which he sees as a factor driving his business right now.
€œChina has moved away from offering generous incentives to produce for western markets,€ he said. €œThey€™re focused on their domestic market.€
A burgeoning consumer market in China also will increase competition for capacity elsewhere, he added.
€œChinese consumers are going to be buying products from other countries in Asia,€ he said.
While Cochrane acknowledges a lot of production is moving out of China, there€™s a learning curve.
€œIf you take all the countries in Asia, they still have maybe one-fifth the capacity of China; and those other countries aren€™t going to have the kinds of incentives you used to see in China, and Chinese workers are the most productive in Asia,€ he said. €œPlus, when you have products moving from one country to the other, there an opportunity for miscommunication is high. You have the makings of a product engineering nightmare. Don€™t get me wrong, so people have figured that out, but a lot of others are having to shift quickly.€
Ralph Scozzafava, CEO of Furniture Brands International, St. Louis, doesn€™t know how much more imported product the market can absorb.
€œWe€™ve reached a point with case goods where we€™re at a saturation point of products coming in from other countries,€ he said, though he added that going back to domestic market share levels of a decade ago probably isn€™t in the cards.
FBI€™s Drexel Heritage and Hickory Chair divisions, in particular, rely considerably on domestic case goods; and Scozzafava added that wood line has a domestic component, and Broyhill still has some domestic cases.
He noted that big companies such as Ashley and Ethan Allen still makes a lot of case goods here.
€œWhy? The supply chain is the big piece,€ Scozzafava said. €œYou can manage your production, and you can control your inventory levels much more easily.€
He noted advantages in the store, as well.
€œAs a retailer, you don€™t have to tie up all that money in inventory, and you don€™t face as many discount issues in getting rid of product that might not have sold,€ he said. €œIf you can free up your cash and get a better margin, that€™s good for a business.€

BARRIERS TO GROWTH
While there€™s been an uptick, there are limiting factors on domestic case goods growth.
€œWe€™re essentially limited to the capacity in the remaining factories,€ Epperson noted. €œPeople like Vaughan-Bassett, Linwood and Lincolnton Furniture will grow into their capacity. You have to remember Vaughan-Bassett didn€™t close some of their capacity€”they mothballed it, ran enough through to keep their permits open.
€œOnce that capacity€™s used, you€™ll have to see if it€™s economically feasible to build new green-field plants, and I don€™t see that happening.€
It€™s just not easy to build a new case goods plant. That€™s one reason Jack Hawn, president and CEO, Zenith Global Logistics, Conover, N.C., hasn€™t seen a big increase in the amount of domestic wood his company handles.
€œI am familiar with a company that was looking at building a new wood factory, but the permits were too complex,€ he said. €œWe aren€™t seeing any big gains in wood.€
Patrick Smith, national sales manager at Watkins Shepard, echoed that take.
€œDomestic case goods production has seen very little increase and in our opinion that will continue unless some of the strict regulatory issues are relaxed enough to make domestic manufacturers more competitive,€ he said. On the other hand, €œDomestic upholstery production has increased due to a number of reasons, i.e. ocean transportation cost increases, time to market and consumer awareness and desire to buy €˜Made in America€™ items when available.€
Cochrane at Lincolnton Furniture believes the biggest drag on increased domestic production is that furniture remains a category not many lenders are willing to bet on.
€œThe greatest barrier is access to capital, which is almost impossible considering the oversight of banks these days. They have the money to loan, and that€™s how they make their money, but it€™s difficult to make a loan for a start-up (furniture manufacturer).
€œWhat we need is a cohesive government program to address these issues, be that through grants or loan guarantees. States like North Carolina are more aggressive from a grant opportunity standpoint with things like the Golden Leaf Fund.€
Environmental requirements also demand extra training. Integrating water-based finishes into the manufacturing process, for example, demands a lot more from sanding operation for the finish to take.
€œThere€™s a learning curve there, and you have to figure it out,€ Cochrane noted. €œFinishing companies, for all their technological ability are still figuring that out themselves.€

COUNTER PUNCHING
Peter Giorgio Jr., president of Global Logistics Solutions, Madison, Conn., coordinates shipping for several large retailers, and he believes offshore vendors aren€™t taking their increased costs sitting down.
€œCertainly the recent increases in ocean freight have created an environment where bottom line margin is noticeably affected,€ he said. This impact most definitely has caused every buyer to at least consider other options. Those options involve looking at production from other overseas origins and domestic warehouses/USA production.
€œTo be honest, I have not seen any reduction in import volume for the accounts I am involved with,€ Giorgio added. €œIn fact, since last Market I have seen new vendors coming into the mix with my accounts and therefore have to assume the buyers have found aggressive pricing for these imports that offset the rise in transportation/material costs.€
Domestic producers that have built a niche, though, have pretty decent prospects at the moment.
€œRetail isn€™t that great right now, but we still have a good backlog,€ Giorgio said. €œIt€™s a great marketing template €¦ and American workers are the most productive in the world.
€œYou couple that with strong manufacturing processes and state-of-the-art machinery, and that€™s a game changer.€ HFB  



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