Bottlenecks take toll on container shipping trade

A container ship moored at Southampton Docks on the south coast of England this month. The world's top container line, Copenhagen-based AP Moller-Maersk, has called the challenges in the container shipping trade "the most dramatic stress test of the

LONDON • Container shipping, the backbone of the global trading system, is showing signs of fatigue as the pandemic descends into its darkest days.

Carriers reaping the biggest profits in at least a decade are struggling to operate reliably as bottlenecks worsen around ports from southern England to Shanghai, contorting supply chains for everything from car parts to cosmetics to medical equipment.

Just 50.1 per cent of container vessels arrived on time last month, down from 80 per cent a year earlier, and the lowest level in records dating back to 2011, according to a service reliability index compiled by Copenhagen-based Sea-Intelligence, an analysis and data provider.

Delays can add costs, induce operational headaches and restrain revenue for the shippers of cargo – companies like Costco Wholesale.

The Issaquah, Washington-based chain of 803 warehouse-size stores on four continents expects the situation involving container shortages and late deliveries to persist for a few more months.

“There are instances of 50 per cent or 100 per cent or even more sale increases of an item, and if we could procure more, we’d have even higher sales,” Mr Richard Galanti, Costco’s chief financial officer, said on a conference call earlier this month. “We’re managing through it, and expect relief not until March or so of 2021.”

Slowly clogging up since September, the main artery for trade between China and the United States is still choked.

Anchored off the coast of California over the weekend were almost 20 container ships waiting to offload at Los Angeles and Long Beach, up from about a dozen at the end of last month.

The Port of Los Angeles expects to handle 152,000 inbound containers this week – a 94 per cent increase from the same week a year ago.

Mr Weston LaBar, chief executive of the Harbour Trucking Association in Long Beach, last month expected container volume through the LA ports to stabilise by mid-February, when Chinese factories typically shut down for Chinese New Year.

“Now we’re hearing already about a lot of bookings through June and July,” he said.

Mr Alan Murphy, CEO of Sea-Intelligence, cautioned that the current imbalances in containers are concentrated in North America and said the strength of demand probably will not be sustained if Covid-19 vaccines enable US consumers to quickly shift spending back to services like travel and hospitality.

The shipping disruptions should calm down in the first half of next year, he said, but do not expect the container liners to make their overcapacity mistakes of the past, which included under-bidding in freight rate contracts to below break-even levels.

“The game has changed fundamentally – not because of the coronavirus, but because of how the carriers responded,” he said, referring to a sharp reduction in sailings in the pandemic’s early months. “They are now capable of tailoring their supply to the available demand at a tactical level that they’ve never been able to do before.”

That is what worries freight forwarders and other shippers, and the concerns extend beyond the troubles in the Pacific.

The European Shippers’ Council, a Brussels-based group representing cargo owners, is crying foul about “degraded services” and surcharges, and wants the European Commission to look into the market dynamics.

The main sticking point: Spot rates to transport goods, which typically fade in the final weeks of the year, are still soaring despite the service disruptions. The rate to ship a container of goods from China to Europe jumped 17 per cent last week, trebling from a year ago to over US$4,400 (S$5,900), according to Hong Kong-based Freightos, an online shipping marketplace.

“Of course we want the shipping lines to be healthy,” said Mr Jordi Espin, the council’s policy manager for maritime transport. “However, to make these kinds of profits when we’re in pandemic rescue mode, we don’t think it’s fair.”

Shippers and container liners are always sparring over prices and reliability. But the pandemic has spotlighted the upper hand that the liners now have after a decade of consolidating and forming alliances among themselves, said Mr Olaf Merk, head of ports and shipping at the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s International Transport Forum.

“That is something that the competition authorities will have to look at, I think, and some are also doing it now,” Mr Merk said, referring to the US Federal Maritime Commission’s investigation into the carriers’ role in American port congestion. “The situation which we are now in gives a lot of possibilities to the carriers to coordinate capacity and that, of course, increases the risks for shippers.”

The world’s top container line, Copenhagen-based AP Moller-Maersk, this month called the challenges “the most dramatic stress test of the past 75 years”.

Other industry representatives said there are multiple reasons on land for why the system is straining, such as trucker shortages, surging e-commerce purchases or Brexit stockpiling. Stuffed with 20 per cent to 30 per cent more cargo than it is used to handling, the pipeline is bound to face some snarls.

“Even with this Covid cargo crunch that we’re now in the middle of, things continue to move,” said Mr John Butler, president of the World Shipping Council in Washington, which counts the big liner companies among its members. “When you so significantly overload the system, it doesn’t immediately snap back.”

Mr Butler dismissed the notion that the industry lacks competitiveness, calling it “cut-throat frankly”.

Meanwhile, shares of Maersk are flirting at an all-time high and the industry more broadly banked profits of US$5.1 billion in the third quarter, a fourfold increase from a year earlier. With a solid fourth quarter, the cumulative red ink of the past five years will become net profitability, according to figures compiled by Mr John McCown, a container-industry veteran and founder of Blue Alpha Capital.

He said the pandemic gave the container carriers a lesson about how to hold firm on capacity as they shift into a longer-term period of slower demand growth.

Among the turmoil of the year: overworked mariners and cyber attacks. But one of the more remarkable events happened on Nov 30, when the Japanese-flagged One Apus hit rough seas sailing from China to the US, sending more than 1,800 containers overboard.

The ship and crew returned safely to Kobe, Japan.

BLOOMBERG