Charter Owners, Operators Confront Container Market’s ‘Great Divergence’

November 7, 2016

Photo: Hapag-Lloyd
Photo: Hapag-Lloyd
The latest Container Shipping Forecaster from Maritime Strategies International highlights the contrasting fortunes of liner operators and tonnage providers.
 
The entire container shipping industry remains under significant pressure. Whilst freight rates have improved marginally from the extreme lows seen over the middle of the year, most liner companies are now at best breaking even, with weaker lines still probably in a loss-making position. The situation is even worse for charter owners, with vessel earnings marooned below operating costs for most mid-sized vessel classes.
 
However, there is considerable variation in the extent to which market participants are in control of their own destinies, with liner companies better able to take decisive action to improve their situation whilst charter owners are largely price-takers with few options to improve either their market position or revenues according to James Frew, Senior Analyst at MSI.
 
“Whilst the operator side of the liner industry continues to be wracked by convulsions and consolidation, the tonnage provider space seems to be slowly sinking ever deeper into the mire. Containership tonnage providers are at the bottom of the food chain, as ultimately liner companies can intermediate the supply of liner shipping capacity to shippers, and push excess capacity back onto the charter owners.”
 
In the light of the current oversupply, and a demand environment which fluctuates between uncertain and disappointing, the industry is taking what evasive action it can on the supply side. September 2016 saw the second-highest monthly total ever for containership demolitions, whilst new orders were confined to just three ships totalling 6,000TEU.
 
The liner operator landscape continues to respond to dire circumstances, but as Frew notes, plans by the three Japanese liner companies to merge their operations reflects a trend that asks questions of the remaining midsized operators.
 
“In broad terms, we regard the liner companies with sufficient scale to compete on a global level being Maersk, MSC, CMA CGM, COSCOCS, Hapag Lloyd, the Japanese and Evergreen. Where this leaves other companies is something of a parlour game but further consolidation appears inevitable. In the new world of consolidated liner companies

Logistics News

ABS Fortifies Digital, Remote Support for Offshore Energy

ABS Fortifies Digital, Remote Support for Offshore Energy

How JobMarineMan Is Building a Direct Crew Recruitment Ecosystem

How JobMarineMan Is Building a Direct Crew Recruitment Ecosystem

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

Baltic Index Reaches One-Week High on Higher Capesize Rates

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

NYK Group’s ICO Launches Belgium’s First Shore Power Facility for RoRo Ships

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Ryanair extends CEO O'Leary's Contract to 2032 and offers a EUR150 million Bonus
Judge rules that the wife of Spanish PM must face corruption charges
Airport security takes action as World Cup fans gorge on ranch dressing