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Boat profits underway as builders say pandemic-era demand is here to stay

 1 year ago
source link: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/boat-profits-underway-as-builders-say-pandemic-era-demand-is-here-to-stay-223734644.html
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New York boat show: ‘Supply chain was awful’ post-pandemic, Regulator Marine president says
 The industry saw 2022 
 become the second-highest 
New York boat show: ‘Supply chain was awful’ post-pandemic, Regulator Marine president says
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Boat profits underway as builders say pandemic-era demand is here to stay

Mike Juang
·Producer
Tue, January 31, 2023, 7:37 AM GMT+9·3 min read

U.S. boat builders are eagerly climbing aboard the pandemic-fueled boom in outdoor recreation.

The recreational boating industry saw sales hit a whopping $56.7 billion in 2021, the second-highest year for spending on boats in nearly two decades, according to the National Marine Manufacturers Association (NMMA), a boating trade group. (NMMA has not yet released statistics for 2022.)

Boat builders expect that momentum to continue into 2023 and say supply chain snags aren’t enough to weigh down the wave of demand.

“There were massive shifts in consumer spending and behavior throughout the pandemic,” Frank Hugelmeyer, president of the National Marine Manufacturers Association, said in an interview with Yahoo Finance (video above) at the New York Boat Show at the Javits Center in New York City. “When you’re sitting there having a little bit of an existential moment, going ‘Oh boy, how long am I gonna live, how long is my family gonna live,’ health and wellness industries and quality-of-life industries exploded during that time.”

A boat speeds along the water on an overcast day.
A speedboat on the water. (Photo: Getty Images)

Boat 'supply chain was awful'

Despite the industry's growth, some builders say a combination of high demand, missing parts, and even freak weather all conspired to jam up production, making it difficult to capitalize on the overwhelming demand.

“The supply chain was awful,” Joan Maxwell, president of Regulator Marine, told Yahoo Finance. “We couldn’t tell our customers when we were going to deliver a boat because we were running out of things.”

To fight shortages, Maxwell's company sourced parts from as far as Australia and tracked certain parts and supplies to discover what shortages were holding up manufacturing. For instance, Maxwell explained that Regulator once found a shortage of the resin it used in waterproofing its boats originated in Texas.

“Who would’ve thought in the middle of a pandemic you would have an ice storm in Texas that would disrupt a boat process,” she said.

A couple sit in Adirondack chairs at the Chaparral powerboat display at the Toronto Boat Show in Toronto, Ontario, Canada January 18, 2019.   REUTERS/Chris Helgren
A couple sit in Adirondack chairs at the Chaparral powerboat display at the Toronto Boat Show in Toronto, Ontario, Canada January 18, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Helgren

Still, builders agree the pandemic provided a boon for recreational boats.


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