Hamburg Süd Hit by Slowdown

Aiswarya Lakshmi
Friday, April 24, 2015

 The Hamburg-headquartered shipping line Hamburg Süd was hit by the economic downturn on the carrier's key markets in Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela.

The modest 2 percent increase in cargo volumes is attributed to the less-than-expected improvement to the market overcapacity and a weak economic development of the carrier’s key markets in South America.
"Hamburg Süd and its Brazilian subsidiary Aliança were able to increase transport volume by 2 per cent only to around 3.4 million TEU (1 TEU = 20 foot standard container). With freight rates falling and a weak US dollar as the most important earnings currency, total sales fell at the same time by around 1 per cent to EUR 5.2 billion. Results from liner operations remained positive, albeit significantly lower than in the previous year," says a press statement.
Not least driven by the declining economic momentum in China, bulk shipping once again had to contend with difficult market conditions in 2014 and was unable to move out of the red. 
The number of staff employed by the shipping Group grew by 4 per cent compared to the previous year to 5,360 employees (including 1,383 crew and excluding trainees). 
Capital expenditures stood at EUR 348 million, which was 23 per cent lower than in the previous year, and were financed entirely from cash flow. These mainly comprise deposits and final payments for ten ships of between 4,800 and 9,600 TEU.
As at 31 December 2014, the Hamburg Süd fleet comprised a total of 168 ships, 46 of which were owned by the Group. Of these, 112 ships were deployed on liner services and 56 chartered-in ships were employed in tramp operations (bulkers, product tankers). As in the previous year, the fleet was expanded by additional ships in the “Cap San” series with a capacity of 9,600 TEU each. 
These were complemented by additional ships in the “San” class with a capacity of 9,000 TEU and a high number of reefer slots for refrigerated containers. This brings the number of ships in service with a slot capacity of at least 9,000 TEU to 13, mainly deployed with their large reefer capacity on the Asia–Europe and Europe–South American East coast routes.
Categories: Shipbuilding Ship Repair & Conversion Bulk Carriers Ship Sales Finance Container Ships Vessels Logistics

Related Stories

CMA CGM Welcomes its First Indian Flagged Vessel at Nhava Sheva Free Port Terminal

USTR: New Measures Target Chinese Maritime Sector

US Fossil Fuel, Farm Groups Rail Against Trump Port Fee Plan

Current News

DP World, Asian Terminals Inc. Invest $100M to Boost Capacity at Manila South Harbor

PD Ports Outlines Plans to Develop UK Offshore Wind Hub

DP World Begins $165 Million Expansion of Maputo Container Terminal Capacity

Port Canaveral Invests $500 Million in Five-Year Port-Wide Improvement Plan

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News