A driver for an independent contractor wears a protective mask while operating a delivery truck to delivery N95 respirator masks outside a United Parcel Service Inc. (UPS) Ground sorting facility in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S., on Monday, April 13, 2020.
Luke Sharrett | Bloomberg | Getty Images
UPS reportedly told its drivers on Cyber Monday to stop picking up packages at some of the largest retailers in the U.S., such as Nike and Gap, after they reached capacity allocations set by the delivery company.
The shipping company also halted package pick-ups for Macy’s, L.L. Bean, Hot Topic and Newegg, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday, citing internal documents confirmed by UPS employees in different regions.
Retailers had attempted to push up the start of the holiday shopping season this year because of the coronavirus pandemic by offering discounts as early as October. The hope was to encourage people to buy online instead of crowding in malls, and spread out the number of packages being shipped at any one time.
The number of shoppers in stores on Thanksgiving weekend was lower than last year, the National Retail Federation said Tuesday. And although online shopping hit record levels from Thursday through Monday, the sales were below the amount forecasted by Adobe Analytics.
UPS had set “specific capacity allocations” for its customers over Black Friday weekend and throughout the holiday season as it works to deliver packages at record volumes, Glenn Zaccara, UPS’s director of media relations, told CNBC Wednesday.
“We’ve worked with our large retail customers to ensure they are aware of how much capacity is available to them,” Zaccara said. If the demand exceeds the planned allocations, UPS will “work with our larger customers to ensure the volume gets picked up and delivered as more capacity becomes available in our network,” he said.
A spokesperson for Nike and Gap were not immediately available for comment.
Online sales reached $10.8 billion on Monday, setting a record for the largest e-commerce shopping day ever, Adobe said. Its data tracks transactions from 80 of the top 100 retailers.
— CNBC’s Melissa Repko and Amanda Lasky contributed to this report.