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NOL narrowly back in the black in Q2 with $3m profit, excluding logistics arm saleNOL narrowly back in the black in Q2 with $3m profit, excluding logistics arm sale

Neptune Orient Lines (NOL) narrowly returned to the black in the second quarter net profit of $3m, excluding the gain from the sale of APL Logistics.

Marcus Hand, Editor

July 30, 2015

1 Min Read
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Singapore-headquartered NOL reported a second quarter profit of $890m, however, this dropped to just $3m once the one time gain from the sale of APL Logistics to Kintetsu Worldwide Express. This compared to a loss of $54m in the quarter of a year earlier.

For the first half of 2015 the container shipping company remained in the red with an $8m loss compared to a $152m loss in the first half of 2014.

The improved result came despite sharply declining container freight rates for liner shipping brand APL and therefore revenues for the company.

Revenues in the second quarter of 2015 declined a steep 24% to $1.55bn compared $2.05bn in the same period a year earlier. For the first half of 2015 revenues dropped 18% to $3.54bn, against $4.33bn in the corresponding period in 2014.

“The group’s container shipping business continued to face a challenging environment characterised by over-capacity and weak market demand. Nonetheless, APL reversed a core EBIT loss in the second quarter last year to a positive position this year,” said NOL group president and ceo Ng Yat Chung.

Commenting on freight rates in an earnings call Ng said: “We saw freight rates fall across all trade lanes to multi-year lows.

 

“Our cost management of operational costs and yield has helped offset a volume decrease as well as the fall down in freight rates.”

 

Looking ahead he said freight rates would continue to face downward pressure due to persistent overcapacity and weak trade growth.

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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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