Container Shipping Rates Drift Lower After a Record-Setting Climb

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The steady climb to ever-higher rates forย container shipping this year is showing signs ofย easing, at least temporarily.

On the busy Shanghai-to-Los Angeles trade route, the rate for a 40-foot container sank by almost $1,000 last week to $11,173, an 8.2% drop from the prior week that was the steepest weekly fall since March 2020, according to Drewry. Another gauge from Freightos, whichย includes premiums and surcharges, showed a nearly 11% plunge to $16,004, the fourth consecutive decline.

Ocean freight is still several times more expensive than it was pre-pandemic, and air cargo rates remain elevatedย too. So itโ€™s anyoneโ€™s guess if these latest declines in global shipping costs mark the beginningย of a plateau, a seasonal turn lower or theย start of a steeper correction.

But investors are taking notice: Shares of the worldโ€™s container lines โ€”ย from the biggest players likeย Maerskย andย Hapag-Lloydย to smaller competitors includingย Zimย andย Matsonย โ€” have stumbled in recent days fromย record highs set in September.

Judah Levine, group head of research at Hong Kong-based Freightos, said the recent softness could reflect slower production in China during its Golden Week holiday combined with power restrictions in some regions.

โ€œItโ€™s possible some reduction in available supply is curbing container demand and freeing up some of the additional capacity that carriers have added during peak season,โ€ย he said.ย โ€œIt is also possible that โ€”ย with ocean delays making it increasingly unlikely that shipments not already moving will make it in time for the holidays โ€”ย the price drop also shows that the peak of peak season is behind us.โ€

Whatโ€™s definitely not over yet is the logjam of ships outside the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, where 60 vessels were waiting for a berth to offload as of late Sunday. The average weight is now more than 11 days, compared with a high of about eight days back in April.

Port congestion is a key person why Bloomberg Intelligence doesnโ€™t see the market at the start of a downtrend.

Meanwhile, as Bloombergโ€™s Robert Tuttle reports, the huntfor the ship that may have caused a major oil spill off the coast of Orange County in California is proving to be a slow grind.

The Big Crunch of 2021 is still reverberating across financial markets and the global economy more broadly, prompting downgrades across equity analystsโ€™ estimates for the upcoming earnings season and causing many ce to start removing emergency stimulus to ward off inflation.

Source: Bloomberg

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