The shipping industry
will go into profit this
year. Small, yes, and not
necessarily evenly spread
round all the lines, but profit
nonetheless.
Last year’s -US$3.7-billion
loss looks very much like it’s
going to turn into +US$1.5
to +US$3bn profit for 2017.
That was the gist of
what Simon Healey, senior
manager of container
research at London-based
shipping analysts Drewry,
said during the company’s
recent webinar on the
container shipping market
outlook.
Looking at data on
the industry’s market
performance in the first
quarter of this year, he noted
that East-to-West freight
rates were up 40% on what
they had been in Q1 2016.
Also, in March, freight rates
strengthened on the intraregional
routes such as intra-
Asia, intra-Med and intra-
Europe, along with strong
spot rates on Asia-Middle
East, Asia-South America
and Asia-West Africa trades.
And Drewry data also
showed a significant volume
recovery in Latin America
and Africa.
“We see a slightly better
outlook for demand in 2017
in these regions,” said the
company report, “but that
is not to say we expect any
return to 5% to 10% growth
scenarios. Any future view
on improvement is based on
how bad the recent past has
been.”
They also highlighted
that, in 2016, the Asia to
East Coast South America
(ECSA) trade volumes had
declined by 15% year on year
and from Asia to West Africa
by 11% y-o-y.
This, according to Drewry,
was all closely linked to the
recession in Brazil, the weak
oil markets in key African
economies such as Nigeria
and Angola, and poor
performance and outlook
for SA – the continent’s
economic powerhouse.
“The outlook for 2017,”
said Drewry, “is a return to
some gross domestic product
(GDP) growth in Brazil and
a slightly better view in the
oil markets. The view is
that the worst of the really
awful cargo declines is over
and that while we may not
see strong growth in 2017,
we will not see continuous,
double-digit declines in
cargo f lows.”
“And,” Healey added,
“we are quite confident the
market is on the turn and
carriers are once again price
givers rather than price
takers.”
But, while carriers may
be winning at the moment,
Healey pointed out that a
four-year sample of Drewry
data showed that “it is clear
from the linear trend line
that they’re fighting against
a long-term downturn in
rates that previous upturns
had failed to arrest”.
“To avert this long-term
downturn,” he added, “it’s
going to require a very
prolonged period of spot
rates above the average.”
Eventually, as all things
do, the current bull-run will
come to an end, according
to Healey. “And, once again,
things will regress back to
the mean. The big question
of course is when?”
You’d have to look at the
factors behind the recent
realignment, he reckoned.
“We think a lot of the reason
for the upturn of late has
been the intense efforts in
terms of how they’ve looked
to carriers and looked
to suppress the supply
expansion structurally
through greater scrapping.
Also, more temporary fixes
in the form of idling and
void sailings.”
Then there are other
factors that are difficult
to quantify in terms of
the impact. That would
be things like the Hanjin
bankruptcy, the mergers
and alliances (m&a) activity
that has been seen. “And, of
course,” Healey added, “the
slightly improving demand
growth story that we’re
seeing.”
Ultimately, what needs to
happen for that long-term
trend to start levelling off?
To answer that, Healey
came up with one of those
economist’s clichés. “There
need to be underlying supply
and demand fundamentals,”
he said.
Looking at 2017, he said
that the Drewry thinking
was that actual E-W rates
would bend a bit closer
to that trend line for the
remainder of this year. “But,
crucially, they will stay above
it. That’s going to keep that
running average creeping
upwards.
“In the final analysis it
is going to go quite a way
towards helping carriers
remove a lot of red ink from
their income statements.”
So, for the time being,
carriers are enjoying a
spot-market renaissance
but Drewry is convinced
the long-term trend
will continue to point
downwards unless there
is an unusually sustained
period of dominance.
“Nonetheless,” the
consultants said, “even
a soft regression back to
the baseline shouldn’t
prevent carriers from being
profitable in the East-West
trades this year.”
Shipping industry heads for profit
12 May 2017 - by Alan Peat
0 Comments
FTW - 5 & 12 May 2017

12 May 2017
12 May 2017
12 May 2017
12 May 2017
12 May 2017
12 May 2017
Border Beat
17 Jun 2025
30 May 2025
Poll
Featured Jobs
New
New
New