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Acting rationally key for container shipping in 2013Acting rationally key for container shipping in 2013

Maersk Line may not be big enough to control the container shipping market in the way dominant players do in some other industries but when its bosses speak the market does sit up and listen.

Marcus Hand, Editor

March 14, 2013

2 Min Read
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Holding somewhere in the region of a 17% market share, Maersk is pinning its hopes on the other major players acting rationally in the coming months. When the container lines all pull in the same direction in terms of managing capacity the results can be remarkably good even if the absolute demand and supply balance is not in lines' favour, as 2010, and to a lesser extent 2012, proved. However, if one major line steps out in an effort to secure market it does not take long for a freight rate war to break out and lines quickly find themselves racking up huge losses as they did in the second half of 2011.

Looking at the simple numbers for the demand and supply balance this year and it does not look good for lines. Maersk estimates that the nominal capacity of the container shipping fleet will grow 11%, while headhaul demand will grow at just 3%. This leaves a yawning gap of 8% that can be disastrous in boxshipping.

Despite this Maersk Line's ceo Soren Skou is upbeat on transpacific rate increases for annual contracts and expects this Friday's slew of carrier increases on Asia – Europe to go through, even if he is less certain on how long they will hold.

What Skou is banking on is that lines will continue to keep their discipline in terms of capacity management that they showed last year. With a forecast of scrapping 2% of the fleet this year, a 1% increase of the idle fleet to roughly 6% mainly as lines return chartered ships to tonnage providers, and additional slow steaming to soak a further 2% of capacity, this would bring down the gap in demand and supply to around just 2% rather than 8%.

Should this scenario pan out 2013 could well be a better year for container shipping the raw demand and supply numbers suggest, but it will as Skou notes "require the industry to act in a rational manner".

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Maersk

About the Author

Marcus Hand

Editor

Marcus Hand is the editor of Seatrade Maritime News and a dedicated maritime journalist with over two decades of experience covering the shipping industry in Asia.

Marcus is also an experienced industry commentator and has chaired many conferences and round tables. Before joining Seatrade at the beginning of 2010, Marcus worked for the shipping industry journal Lloyd's List for a decade and before that the Singapore Business Times covering shipping and aviation.

In November 2022, Marcus was announced as a member of the Board of Advisors to the Singapore Journal of Maritime Talent and Technology (SJMTT) to help bring together thought leadership around the key areas of talent and technology.

Marcus is the founder of the Seatrade Maritime Podcast that delivers commentary, opinions and conversations on shipping's most important topics.

Conferences & Webinars

Marcus Hand regularly moderates at international maritime events. Below you’ll find a list of selected past conferences and webinars.

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