CMA CGM Upbeat Despite China-U.S. spat

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Shipping giant CMA CGM expects to see further growth in its volumes this year as increasing activity from southeast Asia towards the United States helps make up for slowing China-U.S. flows that were a drag on its first quarter.

French-based CMA CGM, the world's fourth-largest containing shipping firm, reported on Wednesday a first-quarter net loss of $43 million, compared with a $77 million loss in the same period last year.

"We are very confident about seeing our volumes grow in 2019, regardless of the geopolitical climate," Chief Financial Officer Michel Sirat said.

Brisk China-U.S. traffic, partly due to U.S. importers anticipating further tariffs in an ongoing trade dispute between Washington and Beijing, buoyed CMA CGM's activity in the second half of last year.

An easing in China-U.S. flows at the start of this year then weighed on CMA CGM's profitability, Sirat said.

But CMA CGM was also seeing higher volumes from southeast Asia towards the United States, reflecting a shift in sourcing of goods from China to countries like Vietnam in response to U.S. tariffs, he said. (Reporting by Gus Trompiz

Categories: Ports Government Update Intermodal Containerships

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