ADVERTISEMENT

Maersk Sees Falling Freight Rates in Bearish Sign for Trade

The world’s largest container shipping line says international freight rates are reversing.

Maersk Sees Falling Freight Rates in Bearish Sign for Trade
A gantry crane loads A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S shipping containers onto a truck at the Kirshnapatnam Co. port in Kirshnapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- The world’s largest container shipping line says international freight rates are reversing after climbing for most of this year, raising questions about the sustainability of the global trade recovery.

Decade-old oversupply issues swamped demand for containerized sea trade in the third quarter, a senior official at Maersk Line Ltd. said in an interview last week. Over 90 percent of trade is routed through ships, making the industry a bellwether for the worldwide economy.

"We have started to see some pockets of downward pressure," said Steve Felder, Mumbai-based managing director of Maersk’s South Asian unit. The global trade order book at around 13.5 percent of capacity isn’t high, "however, given that freight rates are largely determined on the basis of supply-demand balance, they remain fragile," he said.

The International Monetary Fund forecasts growth in world trade volume will slow to 4 percent in 2018 from a projected 4.2 percent this year, though that’s still higher than the seven-year-low of 2.4 percent hit in 2016. Concern about U.S. protectionism and China’s attempts to rebalance its economy away from exports toward domestic consumption pose risks to the revival.

Maersk Sees Falling Freight Rates in Bearish Sign for Trade

Maersk isn’t alone. Drewry Shipping Consultants expects the container-shipping freight growth rate to drop to less than 10 percent in 2018 from around 15 percent in 2017 as a supply glut hits home. CMA CGM, the No. 3 container shipping company, recently signaled slightly lower rates for 2018 in early negotiations of Asia-Europe contracts, analysts at Credit Suisse Group AG wrote in a Nov. 29 note.

"It remains very early in the negotiation period, but this uncertainty is plainly unhelpful to investor confidence,” they said.

Fitch Ratings expects supply of shipping containers to grow more than 5.5 percent in 2018, outpacing an over 4.5 percent expansion in demand.

Air-Freight Buoyant

In contrast, the air-freight market is buoyant after years in the doldrums, International Air Transport Association said last week. The development of e-commerce should mean growth rates remain ahead of the pace of expansion in world trade.

Global trade volumes are recovering from a 2015-2016 slump with demand for goods and services rising 5 percent to 6 percent on Transpacific and Asia-to-Europe trade this year, according to Rahul Kapoor, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.

Nevertheless, Felder, whose company is looking to negotiate higher prices in client contracts for next year, says much depends on how the supply glut pans out.

India Brightens

For India, Felder was optimistic as he sees the impact fade of sweeping policy changes, which include a new consumption tax. India’s containerized trade, representing about 50 percent of overall trade, grew at 10 percent in the quarter ended September. In total, the import-export market in India has grown 7.7 percent in the first three quarters, according to Maersk.

"Given containerized trade growth in the first half was somewhat subdued, it is possible that full-year growth will fall short of double digits," he said. "Much will however depend on fourth-quarter growth levels, which so far look positive."

To contact the reporters on this story: Dhwani Pandya in Mumbai at dpandya11@bloomberg.net, Anirban Nag in Mumbai at anag8@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Pratish Narayanan at pnarayanan9@bloomberg.net, Jeanette Rodrigues, Candice Zachariahs

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.