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Logistics
Sea Freight

Rates storm looms as Suez eyes reuptake of volume

09 May 2025 - by Staff reporter
 Source: Adobe Stock
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Shipping lines are bracing for fresh financial turbulence as ocean carriers prepare to resume transits through the Suez Canal, following the United States’ ceasefire with Houthi rebels in the Red Sea.

The expected uptick in maritime traffic through the strategic waterway may provide an economic reprieve for Egypt, but it is poised to unsettle freight markets already buckling under overcapacity and suppressed rates.

Since late 2023, persistent attacks by Yemen’s Houthi rebels have forced many vessels to reroute around the Cape of Good Hope, resulting in extended voyage times and additional fuel costs.

In response, shipping companies expanded their fleets to maintain service levels, inadvertently contributing to a glut of capacity.

In a bid to stem declining profits, many lines have resorted to cancelling certain calls, blank-sailing scheduled services to stabilise rates.

However, according to insights from maritime analytics platform Xeneta, the reopening of the Red Sea route could ignite a new wave of volatility.

A sudden rediversion of global traffic through the Suez Canal — shaving up to two weeks off certain Asia-Europe voyages — would unleash surplus tonnage back into regular trade lanes, potentially flooding the market.

There's a rates storm about to blow in, said a Xeneta analyst, citing the disconnect between demand and the expanded global fleet.

This could cause a sharp drop in freight rates, particularly on east-west corridors.

For cargo owners and their agents, the news might be welcomed since elevated logistics costs have weighed on shipping costs for some time.

But for carriers, whose balance sheets have already been tested by months of detours and deteriorating rates, the timing could not be worse.

Industry observers warn that unless demand picks up significantly — a scenario currently unsupported by global economic indicators — rates could plummet to levels last seen during the pandemic-era lows.

The situation revives memories of 2016, when the collapse of South Korea's Hanjin Shipping sent shockwaves through global supply chains.

Analysts are now watching closely to see how major players such as Maersk, MSC and CMA CGM respond in the coming weeks. Many may seek to rapidly scale back deployments or push for new rate hikes, though such measures will be difficult to enforce in an oversupplied market.

For now, the Suez Canal’s return to prominence may be a diplomatic and logistical victory — but for global shipping lines, it appears to herald choppier waters ahead.

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