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Costco Limiting Water And Toilet Paper Purchases As Delta Variant Spreads

Costco Limiting Water And Toilet Paper Purchases As Delta Variant Spreads
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If you have suspected that people are stocking up on supplies again, you might be correct. Members-only big-box retail chain Costco has confirmed that its stores are once more limiting the sales of some products, including bottled water, toilet paper and some cleaning supplies. If you go to your local Costco today, you may only be able to buy one or two packages of each.

Shoppers began wondering if shortages were coming last month. Several customers took to social media questioning the lack of toilet paper and other items.

“Costco is out of toilet paper,” tweeted @meezsmom, “That says all we need to know about where we are headed again!”

“Costco is out of toilet paper & paper towels,” posted Twitter user @Crixiest. “A lady who walked up after me said: ‘uh, this again? What’s going on?’ Me: Yep, Deltas not messing around, people are stocking up.”

The astute shoppers were not mistaken. On Sept. 23, Costco officially confirmed that it had reinstated purchase limits on the items during a call with analysts.

“We’re putting some limitations on key items like bath issues, roll towels, Kirkland Signature water — high demand related SKUs related to the uptick in the Delta related demand,” Costco CFO Richard Galanti said.

He noted that supply chains are being affected by many factors, including a lack of readily available raw materials, components and ingredients in some sectors, and as a result, major brands are asking for longer lead times. Also, in some cases, as with certain brands of anti-bacterial cleaner, there’s plenty of supply but getting them to stores is a problem because of labor shortages.

“A year ago there was a shortage of merchandise,” Galanti said, “Now they’ve got plenty of merchandise, but there’s two- to three-week delays on getting it delivered because there’s a limit on short-term changes to trucking and delivery needs of the supplier.”

The restrictions Costco is imposing will hopefully stop people from stockpiling, so more consumers can get the merchandise when they need it going forward.

Manufacturers and other retailers are noticing an uptick in purchases of these items as well. For example, Procter & Gamble Co., which makes brands such as Charmin and Bounty, said it is increasing production to meet demand. According to the Wall Street Journal, the company attributes the uptick to factors such as government stimulus, back-to-school shopping and extra concern about cleaning sparked by rising Covid-19 cases.

This story originally appeared on Simplemost. Checkout Simplemost for additional stories.