Temu and Shein packages are flooding delivery networks. Will the surge persist?

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Temu and Shein’s rapid rise to prominence has given the parcel delivery market a shot in the arm.

In July alone, the e-commerce marketplaces each provided carriers with about 900,000 packages daily in the U.S., according to ShipMatrix data shared with sister publication Supply Chain Dive.

The two companies’ shipments enter the country through a streamlined supply chain process that leans on the “de minimis” exemption. This helps keep prices low to draw in more shoppers — which generates more volume for carriers to deliver.

But mounting lawmaker scrutiny and Customs and Border Protection crackdowns are threatening the exemption’s future, at least in its current state. Parcel carriers are counting on Temu and Shein to adapt, given how intertwined some industry players have become with the two companies, experts interviewed by Supply Chain Dive said.

“I do think the smaller carriers and regional carriers would be greatly impacted by a disruption to the volume,” said Nate Skiver, founder of parcel consultancy LPF Spend Management.

‘Explosive’ growth catches UPS’ attention

For now, the boom is helping carriers regain volume momentum since the COVID-19 pandemic’s home delivery rush subsided.

After more than two years of sagging volume, UPS finally shook off its demand slump in the second quarter of 2024. Average daily U.S. volume went up 0.7% year over year in Q2 for the carrier, aided by heightened interest for its low-cost SurePost service.

UPS grows U.S. volume for first time since Q4 2021

Year-over-year growth for average daily package volume in UPS’ U.S. Domestic segment.

CEO Carol Tomé said in a July earnings call that e-commerce companies operating a different shipping model than traditional UPS users helped drive this rebound.

“There were two new e-commerce customers that came into our network, and you can imagine who they are,” Tomé said. “These are new e-commerce shippers in the United States whose volume has been quite explosive.”

Temu and Shein weren’t mentioned in the call by name, but both companies use UPS, and experts interviewed by Supply Chain Dive said they are driving the carrier’s surge in lightweight volume.

“It’s the only two retailers that could have enough volume to actually impact their results like that,” said Alan Amling, an assistant professor of practice at the University of Tennessee and former VP of corporate strategy for UPS.

Temu and Shein aren’t just driving demand for UPS. Temu also uses FedEx, the U.S. Postal Service and a wide selection of smaller carriers to deliver packages once they arrive in the U.S., according to its website. Shein’s website doesn’t specify the carriers it uses, but it notes that returns can be made via UPS or the Postal Service.

“The only growth that’s propping up the last-mile market is coming from cross-border e-commerce,” said Andrew Townsend, SVP of corporate development and strategy at SpeedX, which delivers for both Temu and Shein.

Temu and Shein command low delivery prices

In exchange for all the volume they are giving carriers, Temu and Shein want generous shipping rates, carrier executives and industry observers told Supply Chain Dive.

“Having so much volume on a daily basis should allow them to negotiate some really favorable rates, and then taking into account just the broader U.S. parcel market is already soft, so that just commands better pricing,” LPF Spend Management’s Skiver said.

Inexpensive rates allow Temu and Shein to maintain highly competitive prices on the products they sell while still covering the cost of air shipping into the U.S., an essential cog in their supply chain models.

The companies’ cost-centric approach leaves little room for speed, at least for their regular delivery methods. Temu’s standard shipping is free for customers but delivery times can range from six to 22 days. Standard shipping on Shein is free for orders over $29 — otherwise, it costs shoppers $3.99 — and takes an estimated 10 to 13 days.

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