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Hong Kong Set to Lose Spot Among Top 5 Container Ports in 2018

Sea freight processed in the city dropped for a second straight month in November.

Hong Kong Set to Lose Spot Among Top 5 Container Ports in 2018
Container ships sit moored next to shipping containers and gantry canes at the Kwai Tsing Container Terminals, operated by Hong Kong International Terminal (HIT). (Photographer: Anthony Kwan/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong is poised to lose its ranking as the world’s fifth-busiest container port if cargo-handling trends continue.

Sea freight processed in the city dropped for a second straight month in November, making Hong Kong the only container port among the world’s top five to report weaker traffic, based on statistics compiled by port authorities. South Korea’s Busan, ranked sixth, has narrowed the gap and is set to overtake Hong Kong on an annual basis in 2018, said Rahul Kapoor, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.

As China expanded its manufacturing prowess to become the biggest exporter of everything from fabrics to machinery, the nation also boosted capacity at its ports, making it possible for larger ships to start direct services to major cities such as Shanghai and Shenzhen. Until 2004, Hong Kong was the world’s busiest container port as it served as a conduit for cargo moving in and out of China.

“The hollowing of manufacturing activities in Hong Kong has been the main driver,” Corrine Png, chief executive officer of Crucial Perspective, a specialist in Asian transportation equity research. “Hong Kong faces stiff competition, mainly from the Chinese ports, especially as the Chinese have been investing heavily in port infrastructure in recent years and working on improving their operating efficiency.”

Hong Kong handled 18.97 million 20-foot containers in the first 11 months of 2017, 6.4 percent more than a year earlier. That trails the 8.3 percent increase for Shanghai and 9.1 percent growth in Singapore.

Hong Kong Set to Lose Spot Among Top 5 Container Ports in 2018

Hong Kong has slipped steadily through the annual rankings over the last decade. The city’s port lost its No. 1 status to Singapore in 2005, No. 2 to Shanghai in 2007, No. 3 to Shenzhen in 2013, and its fourth placing to Ningbo in 2015.

It’s set to be overtaken again, this time by Busan, which has seen increased traffic from transshipment cargo to the Bohai Bay area in northeastern China, according to Drewry Financial Research Services. Based on available ports data, traffic at Busan exceeded Hong Kong’s for three of the 11 months so far this year.

Shenzhen, just across the border from Hong Kong, has been expanding its capacity as it serves as a major port for exports of goods manufactured in factories in southern China. The city’s harbor is the world’s third-busiest after Shanghai and Singapore.

Most of the biggest container ships worldwide -- even the ones operated by Hong Kong-based Orient Overseas Container Line Ltd. -- favor calls at Chinese ports en route to Europe.

“There’s a general trend of increased direct services to China, so there’s reduced demand for transshipment in Hong Kong,” said Victor Wai, an analyst at Drewry in Singapore. “For Busan to overtake Hong Kong, it will be because Hong Kong is losing its volume.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Kyunghee Park in Singapore at kpark3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeff Sutherland at jsutherlan13@bloomberg.net, Lena Lee

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.