grocery store facemask
A woman wearing a mask moves her shopping cart December 3, 2020 in a Trader Joe's supermarket in New York City.
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  • The president of UPS said on Sunday that he expected major supply-chain snags to continue into 2022.
  • Over the past week, several companies have expressed concerns over ongoing supply-chain issues.
  • The US's largest supermarket chain said Friday it planned to hike prices alongside other companies.
  • See more stories on Insider's business page.

Companies are preparing for historic supply chain snags to continue into 2022.

The president of UPS, Scott Price, said on Sunday that low global vaccination rates, especially in developing countries, is likely to contribute to increased shortages in the coming year.

"The logistics industry does not see 2022 as having any less disruption in supply chains than in 2021," Price told AFP, an international news agency located in Paris, France.

Since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, a boom in demand has overwhelmed the supply chain. Transportation has struggled to keep up as rising demand met COVID-19 shutdowns, labor shortages, as well as historic weather occurrences, causing a lack of shipping containers and supplies, alongside major price hikes.

Price's comment comes at the same time as overseas shipping rates between Asia and the US have hit an all-time high. Judah Levine, the Head of Research at Freightos, told Insider shipping prices between the two regions have jumped 500% from this time last year.

While the UPS executive said he expects transportation costs to stabilize in the coming year, several companies have already boosted consumer prices due to elevated shipping costs.

Kroger, the nation's largest supermarket chain, indicated on Friday that it plans to hike prices due to inflation.

Kroger is "passing along higher costs to the customer where it makes sense to do so," CFO Gary Millerchip said at the company's earnings call on Friday.

Food prices in the US have been on the rise for six straight months. In June, US consumer prices hit their largest annual increase since 2008, with oil and food prices leading the categories with the largest price hikes.

On Friday, Toyota said it plans to further slash its output over the next two months by 400,000 units due to the computer-chip shortage. Similarly, major paint company Sherwin Williams has been plagued by shortages since the Texas freeze, and more recently due to the impact of Hurricane Ida on petrochemical production.

Athletic apparel company Lululemon said last week that the company is struggling with shortages and higher transportation costs because much of its supplies like many US companies are made in countries like Vietnam that have suffered from COVID-19 shutdowns in recent months. The company has been one of the retailers to see a surge in sales during the pandemic, as work-from-home pushed a boom in athleisure wear.

In 2021, the UPS hiked their prices by 4 to 5.5%, but Price said he expects prices to increase by a much slimmer average of 2.8% in 2022.

"I half-jokingly tell people 'Order your Christmas presents now because otherwise on Christmas day, there may just be a picture of something that's not coming until February or March,'" Price said.

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