Hand Sanitizer shortages across the globe spawns panic – as coronavirus outbreak spreads

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Demand for hand sanitizer is surging around the globe as the new coronavirus spreads, prompting retailers to ration supplies and online vendors to hike prices. Sales of hand sanitizers and similar products have swelled across several international markets since the COVID-19 outbreak began in January. The virus, which originated in China, has now spread to more than 60 countries. According to data published Tuesday by market research firm Kantar, U.K. hand sanitizer sales saw a year-on-year increase of 255% in February. Meanwhile, British shoppers were buying 7% more liquid hand soaps and spent 10% more on household cleaners compared to February 2019. British drug store chain Boots — a subsidiary of Walgreens — told CNBC via email on Tuesday it had implemented a limit of two hand sanitizers per purchase across its 2,465 stores.

Asian consumers have also been stockpiling personal hygiene goods in the wake of the outbreak, according to a report published Monday by Nielsen. Analysts found that sales in Malaysia of hand sanitizers hit almost 1 million Malaysian ringgit ($237,176) during the week ending January 26 — that’s 800% higher than the country spends on the product in an average week. In Italy, where 2,041 cases of the coronavirus and 52 deaths have been confirmed so far, sales of hand soap were up 29%, Nielsen said. Earlier this week, data from Adobe Analytics reportedly showed that demand for hand sanitizers in the U.S. spiked by 1,400% between December and January. According to Nielsen, hand sanitizer purchases in the United States were up 73% during the four weeks until February 22, with analysts predicting sales “won’t peak for some time.”

Hand SaniTexas-based grocery chain H-E-B reportedly said on Sunday it would limit customers to four hand sanitizers, wipes or similar items per purchase. “Store shelves in Taiwan, China and Japan are void of bleach (and) hand sanitizer,” Neilsen analysts also noted in their report on Monday. In Singapore, supermarkets were cleaned out of household cleaning products and hand sanitizers over the weekend. Pharmacies in the city state, where there have been more than 100 confirmed cases of the new coronavirus, are also limiting how many hand sanitizers customers can buy at a time. Online stocks of many hand sanitizer gels have sold out at Amazon, Walgreens and Walmart, with U.K. drug stores Boots and Superdrug also selling out of hand sanitizers in store and online.

The surge in demand has prompted some third-party sellers to inflate their prices on platforms including Amazon and eBay. In the U.K., a Defendol hand gel retailing at £3.49 ($4.46) in stores is being sold for £109.99 on Amazon. Elsewhere, Italian vendors are also raising online prices. On Amazon, one seller is offering four 3 fluid-ounce bottles of sanitizer for 60 euros ($66.77), while 10 fluid-ounce bottles of Purell are selling for 80 euros on eBay. On eBay’s Singapore website, one vendor is selling two 10 fluid-ounce bottles of sanitizer for 733 Singapore dollars ($527). Health experts have repeatedly urged the public to practice good hand hygiene since the coronavirus outbreak began. The WHO advises washing hands “regularly and thoroughly” with soap and water or an alcohol-based if soap and water is not available. – CNBC

Portland Hand Sanitizer

On the western outskirts of Portland, four miles from where the first Oregon coronavirus patient is hospitalized, the Walgreens is sold out of hand sanitizer. That’s a common refrain. A store clerk at that Northwest Cornell Road location told WW this afternoon that every other Walgreens he’s called in a 50-mile radius is out of face masks and hand sanitizer, too.  The run on disinfectant falls in the wake of Gov. Kate Brown’s announcement on Friday evening that a Washington County resident has a “presumed positive” case of coronavirus. The person, an employee of Forest Hills Elementary School in Lake Oswego, had no known contact with anyone who recently traveled to affected countries, meaning they likely acquired the coronavirus via “community spread.” On Saturday, Washington state health officials announced that a Kirkland man died from the virus—the first coronavirus death of an American. Oregonians understandably have been on edge this weekend. The result: empty store shelves across the metro area. –WWeek

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