Literature
Review:
Liner
shipping industry is a very dynamic and price sensitive industry and is largely
related to trade of commodities, or generally economic growth of nations.
Increase in trade during last decade from 2001 to 2014 has led to a sharp
increase in container trade with few slowdowns during depression and recession
periods. Containerships size has also seen a growing trend over the last decade
with over 18000 TEU
[AS1] containerships
being continuously build during recent years.
Though
container trade growth has continued to expand strongly, the containership
sector continues to face supply management issues which have been there since
the steep decline in trade volumes from 2009. According to Clarkson research,
global container trade was expected to increase by 6.0% in 2014 to reach 170.9m
TEU, following a growth of 4.9% in 2013. There has been significant growth on
both the mainlane and non-mainlane trade routes throughout world. Global
container trade growth is projected to accelerate further in 2015 to 6.7% amidst
challenging margins in the industry. In recent years, operators have used both
idling and slow steaming as means of absorbing excess capacity. Whereas the
idle fleet has declined this year to the lowest level since 2011, still there
is around 1.3% of total fleet capacity in lay-up. For the meantime, there
remains a mismatch between those trade lanes which are exhibiting the strongest
growth and the size of vessels on the order book.
Liner
Shipping Fleet Overview
Ro-Ro Market
The Ro-Ro
[AS2] market remains under pressure, although there has been an
improvement in benchmark time charter rates so far this year. By late September
2014, the 1 year time charter rate for a large 3,500 4,000lm Ro-Ro had risen to
$14,250/day, up from $11,000/day at the end of 2013. The benchmark rate for a
2,000- 2,500lm vessel has also improved marginally to $9,750/day, up 8% since
the start of the year. However, rates remain at historically low levels.
Meanwhile, the guide price for a 5 year old c.2,400lm Ro-Ro stood at $33.3m at the
end of August 2014, down 2% since the start of the year, and still around 25%
below the 10 year historical average.
In the PCC [AS3] market, time charter rates are still significantly lower than
pre-recession levels.
However, there has been a slight improvement in market
conditions so far this year, with the 1 year time charter rate for a 6,500 ceu [AS4] PCC standing at $25,500/day in August 2014, up 10% on the 2013
average. Nevertheless, this compares with levels as high as $40-50,000/ day in
2007/08, when the PCC supply/demand balance was significantly tighter.
Ro-Ro cargo volumes have remained under pressure in key markets.
Volumes on the intra- Europe trade, where a large proportion of Ro- Ro vessels
are employed, suffered severely in 2009 and have yet to fully recover.
Nevertheless, a number of key ports in the Northern European range saw a slight
improvement in Ro- Ro cargo volumes last year. Further growth in volumes has
been recorded so far in 2014, with Ro-Ro volumes at Zeebrugge up 6% y-o-y in
the first half of 2014, and at Rotterdam by 8% y-o-y, both reportedly
reflecting improvements in the UK economy. Meanwhile, the PCC sector suffered a
dramatic downturn during the global economic recession, but seaborne trade in
cars has bounced back since 2009, although volumes still remain slightly below
pre-recession levels. In 2013, seaborne car trade grew by an estimated 3.9% to
21.4m cars, despite relatively weak exports from Japan and Korea, the two
largest exporters. Trade growth has been held back somewhat this year by
relative weakness in exports from the major Asian manufacturers, as relocation
of production to developing countries has continued. However, car sales have
continued to grow robustly in many developing regions, supporting overall
import growth.
Trade volumes appear to be improving in both the Ro-Ro and PCC
sectors this year, and the lack of strong fleet growth expected in the short
-term could support more positive market fundamentals and reduce oversupply.
While seaborne car trade growth has been held back recently, improving demand
in Europe and the US, in addition to the further diversification of car
importers and producers, should support continued trade growth. Meanwhile, the
Ro-Ro sector is likely to be significantly affected by the introduction of more
stringent emissions limits in the European ECA from the start of 2015.
Operators have so far appeared fairly hesitant to retrofit older
vessels to meet the new limits, and this could lead to further scrapping of
older vessels, and ordering of more ‘eco’-vessels in the short-term.
MPP/General Cargo
MPP/General Cargo vessels traditionally carry both break bulk [AS5] and container shipments. However, some cargoes which have
historically been carried by the MPP fleet are increasingly being shipped by
other vessel types, as competition for cargo volumes has proved fierce ever
since the onset of the downturn. MPP vessels are designed to carry a flexible
range of cargoes, and as such tend to operate in areas which fall outside the
mainstream scope of the demanding infrastructure requirements of the fully
cellular container routes in terms of the commodities they carry and the
geographical regions in which they trade.
MPP and general cargo market conditions have remained
challenging in recent years. In August 2014, the benchmark 1 year time charter
rate for a 17,000 dwt (900 TEU) MPP stood at $7,500/ day, down 10% from the
2013 average, and down 34% from the ten year historical average of $11,334/day.
However, the rate for a smaller 9,000 dwt vessel has shown some improvement in
recent months. Overall, 2013 was a difficult year for MPP operators, with break
bulk and project cargo volumes reported to be relatively weak, while
competition with other vessel types remained strong. Oversupply in the container
and bulk carrier markets has contributed to this, as has the further
containerization of breakbulk cargoes. However, some major European ports have
reported an increase in breakbulk throughput so far in 2014. Competition with
other vessel sectors is expected to continue to affect the MPP [AS6] and general cargo sectors. While some cargo which does not fit
in standard containers is increasingly being carried by containerships (as
operators continue to face supply pressure), MPPs retain a competitive advantage
when it comes to the handling of heavy-lift and industrial cargoes. Ships with
higher specifications are generally more likely to find employment, and as a
result operators are likely to continue to focus investment into such vessels.
Overall, the MPP and general cargo sectors are expected to remain under
pressure in the short-term, although the outlook for demand is improving
slightly, supported by economic growth in developing countries and expected
growth in project cargo volumes. Meanwhile, fleet expansion is expected to
continue to be relatively limited.
Sub-3,000 TEU containerships
Containerships in the sub-3,000 TEU sector face increased competition on the intra-regional trades from the ‘cascading’ of larger box ships. Charter earnings in the sector are up in the year to date compared to full year 2013 but remain in the doldrums in historical terms. Charter earnings for a gearless 2,750 TEU box ship have averaged $7,217/day in the year to date, a rise of 6% compared to full year 2013.
Secondhand prices for this sector have fallen in the year to
date compared to end 2013 with the price of a 10 year old 2,750 TEU box ship
falling 10% to $9.25m. The idle fleet in the sub-3,000 TEU sector looks to have
averaged over 100 vessels in the year to date, around 3-4% of the sector’s
overall capacity. With the majority of the idle vessels charter owned, owners
are struggling to find much upside in earnings. Meanwhile, rates for boxes
shipped from Shanghai to West Japan averaged $343/TEU in the first eight months
of 2013 but for the same period in 2014 they averaged just $310/TEU.
August freight rates on intra-Asian trades in general were
seemingly at historical lows. Intra-Asian trade in full year 2014 is expected
to total 48.2m TEU which will account for 28% of overall container trade and
much of the deployment of sub-3,000 TEU units. These volumes are amongst the
fastest growing in the container sector and are expected to have grown in
volume by 48% between 2009 and 2013 and by 7.7% in 2014. They are projected to
expand by around 8% again in 2015. A significant number of sub-3,000 TEU
vessels, in general a little smaller than those employed within Asia, are also
employed on the intra- European trades which are growing more moderately than
those intra-Asia, at around 3.5% in 2014.
Whilst the intra-regional trades, led by intra- Asia, are
projected to exhibit strong growth in the years ahead, supply challenges,
resulting from the idling of capacity and the ‘cascading’ of relatively larger
tonnage into the small box ship arena, are currently exerting downward pressure
on charter rates. However, the challenges of operating larger vessels on the
intra-regional trades, including less advanced infrastructure at some ports, is
likely at some point to provide a barrier to the further cascading of
additional larger containerships into this sector. In time, the charter market
environment in this segment should finally see some protection from the source
of the current pressure, and an eventual improvement. This is likely to be a
result of an improving supply demand balance for the containership sector as a
whole backed by cumulative volume amelioration, in addition to the thin
orderbook in the smaller sizes and the shrinking fleet in this sector driven by
elevated demolition volumes.
3000-8,000 TEU containerships
The 3,000-8,000 TEU sector includes both Panamax and Post-Panamax vessels. Post- Panamax containerships, whose dimensions are too large for the current Panama Canal, are deployed across on a wide range of routes, including mainlane, North-South, and non-mainlane East-West routes. Deployment of Panamax vessels is also diverse. Cascading of larger vessels onto non-mainlane routes has exerted pressure on some freight rates this year. In the first eight months of 2014, freight rates on the Shanghai-Santos route averaged $1,100/TEU, down 20% on the full year 2013 average, while rates on the Shanghai-South Africa route fell 14% to $693/TEU. While there has been an improvement in Panamax charter rates in recent months (particularly relative to other box ship segments), they remain at historically depressed levels. By the end of September, the 1 year TC rate for a 4,400 TEU Panamax vessel had reached $10,500/day, compared to an average of around $8,700/day in 2013, but still down 53% from the 10-year historical average. Meanwhile, the 3 year TC rate for a 6,800 TEU Post-Panamax vessel has fallen slightly this year, averaging around $24,500/day in January-August, down 11% from the 2013 average.
North-South container trade is expected to grow by 5.7% in full
year 2014 to total 30.5m TEU. The fastest growing of these trades are those
between Africa and the Northern Hemisphere which are projected to grow by 6.1%
y-o-y in full year 2014 to 10.5m TEU. The intra-Asian trades, where Panamax
vessels have been redeployed in greater numbers than many expected this year,
are set to grow 7.7% y-o-y in full year 2014, to a total of 48.2m TEU. At the
start of 2014, around 70 Panamax vessels were estimated idle, but the figure is
now reported to be significantly lower.
Whilst more Panamaxes have been able to find greater employment
on the intra-regional trades than initially thought this year, the ability to
continue this cascade down the route hierarchy is likely to be finite. However,
Post-Panamax containerships in this sector are likely to find more employment
opportunities on fast growing North-South trades, and the transpacific trade
traversing the expanded Panama Canal. These deployment growth opportunities
combined with limited fleet expansion could create a supply deficit for vessels
of this type.
8,000-12,000 TEU containerships
The 8-12,000 TEU sector continues to grow strongly, as these
vessels offer relatively flexible employment options. Most vessels in this
sector are currently deployed on Transpacific and Far East-Europe trades, but
an increasing number are also employed on non-mainlane trades, for example
North-South Operators have continued to slow steam services on these routes in
order to reduce costs and alleviate some supply pressure. Average freight rates
for boxes shipped from Shanghai to the US West Coast have averaged $1,978/FEU
in the first eight months of the year, down 5% from the 2013 average. However,
freight rates for boxes shipped from Shanghai to the US East Coast have
improved this year, supported by some carriers diverting shipments from the
West Coast where docker contract negotiations are leading to issues. Freight
rates to the USEC averaged $3,565/FEU in the first eight months of the year, up
7% on the 2013 average. Meanwhile, the three year charter rate for a 9,000 TEU
containership has remained relatively stable so far this year, averaging
$39,444/day in January-August 2014. The newbuilding price for a 8,500 TEU
containership has risen marginally since the start of 2014 to reach $88m at the
end of August, while the price for a 5 year old 8,800 TEU vessel has softened
by 3% to reach $65m.
Transpacific container trade has grown strongly so far this
year, largely owing to US economic improvements. During the first seven months
of 2014, peak-leg Transpacific volumes between Asia and North America were up
by 5.1% y-o-y, and are projected to total 14.6m TEU in the full year. This
represents faster growth than the 4.2% expansion in 2013, and 0.5% growth
recorded in 2012. Meanwhile, North-South volumes are expected to increase by
5.7% in full year 2014, and by 7.0% in 2015, although Latin American volumes,
key for this sector, look set to grow a touch more moderately.
The 8-12,000 TEU fleet is expected to continue to grow strongly,
with capacity expansion of around 15% p.a. projected in 2014 and 2015. These
vessels are likely to continue to be increasingly deployed on non-mainlane
routes, such as North-South and Middle East-Indian Sub-Continent trades, as
more ships are cascaded down from the Far East-Europe trade. Ships in this
sector will also be capable of and well-suited to traversing the expanded
Panama Canal, which is due to open in 2016. It likely that, up to a certain
size, they will eventually replace Panamaxes on the Far East- US East Coast
trades where they can deliver greater per TEU efficiencies. New building
interest in the sector is likely to remain robust into the longer-term, as a
result of ongoing fresh deployment opportunities, and the continued pressure
for operators to continue to drive down slot costs across the liner network.
12,000+ TEU Containership
The 12,000+ TEU sector is the fastest growing element of the
overall containership fleet. These vessels are almost exclusively deployed on
the Far East-Europe trade lane, where economies of scale are perceived to offer
the greatest benefits. Only a few of these ships are deployed elsewhere, as
opportunities have been generally limited by lower volumes and infrastructure
constraints. Firm deliveries of large vessels onto the Far East-Europe trad has
kept freight rates on the route under pressure, despite operators continuing to
slow steam services. While the freight rate on the Shanghai-Europe route in the
year to date is up 15% on the 2013 average at $1,267/day, rates have softened
in recent months to fall below $1,000/TEU. Meanwhile, the benchmark newbuild
price for a 13,000 TEU boxship stood at $115.5m at the end of August, up 2%
from the end of 2013.
Volume growth on the Far East-Europe trade has clearly returned
to form in the year to date, further driving increased demand for 12,000+ TEU
units. After shrinking by 4.2% in 2012, peak-leg volumes increased by around 4%
in 2013, and have reportedly risen by 8% y-o-y in January-July 2014. This
growth largely reflects continued improvement in economic performance in many
European countries.
Overall, peak-leg Far East-Europe trade is projected to total
15.2m TEU in 2014, up 6.5% y-o-y. Trade on the non-peak leg from Europe to Asia
is projected to increase by 3.2% to 7.0m TEU in full year 2014. Despite
sprightly trade growth so far this year, the Far East-Europe trade remains a
competitive environment. Supply pressures have led to volatile freight rates,
increasingly encouraging operators to explore potential alliances. Following
the rejection of the ‘P3’ by Chinese regulators in mid-2014, the proposed ‘2M’
and ‘Ocean Three’ alliances plan to compete on the trade lane with the existing
‘G6’ and ‘CKYHE’. Newbuilding interest in the 12,000+ TEU sector is likely to
remain high, as operators continue to pursue lower unit costs and greater per
TEU efficiencies.
Not all carriers have yet committed so significantly to these
vessels, so many may still need to invest. Meanwhile, as the fleet of 12,000+
TEU containerships continues to expand at a rapid pace and take advantage of
upsizing opportunities, delivery of these vessels is likely to continue to lead
to redeployment of relatively smaller ships off the Far East-Europe trade. How
operators handle the rate of this cascade will remain key for the development
of freight rates on the route. Decisions by regulators over the formation of
potential alliances will also have a major influence on the environment for
these vessels. While a range of factors currently limit carriers’ ability to
deploy 12,000+ TEU ships on the Transpacific, opportunities may eventually
spread to other trades (such as the Far East-Middle East) in the long-term.
Global
Containership trade
While container trade growth has continued to expand robustly,
the containership sector continues to face the issues of supply management that
have been present since the unprecedented contraction in trade volumes in 2009.
Global container trade is expected to increase by 6.0% in full year 2014 to
reach 170.9m TEU, following expansion of 4.9% in 2013. In the year to date,
there has been robust growth on both mainlane and non-mainlane trade routes.
Intraregional trade is expected to expand robustly this year, with the
intra-Asian volumes projected to grow at a rate of 7.8%. In particular, trade
growth on the Far East-Europe and Transpacific routes has returned to form
faster than initially expected, supporting the projection of growth of 4.9% in
total mainlane trade in full year 2014. Global container trade growth is
projected to accelerate further in 2015 to 6.7%.
The Far East-Europe peak leg trade grew robustly at 7.7% in
2014, and it is expected to expand by 6.4% in 2015. Having grown by 6.3% in
2014, expansion on the peak leg Transpacific route is expected to accelerate
slightly, to 7.0% this year. This should contribute to a broad base for global
demand growth in 2015. The container capable fleet is expected to expand by
5.8% in 2015, to 21.6m TEU. Fully cellular fleet capacity, which rose by 6.4%
in 2014, is expected to expand by a further 6.4% in 2015, to 19.4m TEU, with
1.5m TEU of containership capacity expected to be delivered this year.
The fully cellular containership orderbook numbered 440 vessels
of a combined 3.3m TEU at the start of 2015, equivalent to 18.0% of total fleet
capacity. The orderbook is dominated by very large vessels, with the 12,000+
TEU sector accounting for 61% of total orderbook capacity (Section 4). Delivery
of these boxships is expected to reach 0.7m TEU in 2015. • As a means of
managing oversupply, running capacity growth has been curbed by the extensive
adoption of containership slow steaming, which is estimated to have absorbed
around 2.5m TEU of nominal capacity. Despite the recent fall in bunker costs, so
far there has been no clear or significant increase in vessel speeds. Boxship
idling fell last year, to reach 0.2m TEU at end 2014, equivalent to 1.3% of
fleet capacity.
After a record year for demolition activity in 2013, 0.38m TEU
was sold for scrap in 2014, the second highest annual level. A total of 171
boxships were scrapped last year, including 43 Panamax vessels. Following
elevated demolition and limited deliveries in 2014, the sub- 5,000 TEU fleet
contracted by 2% last year. Boxship scrapping is currently set to remain high
in 2015, with 0.34m TEU projected to be scrapped. Global container trade is
expected to continue growing at a slightly faster pace than total container
capable supply in 2015. Whilst this narrow lead was established in 2014, a high
number of very large containerships were delivered last year, putting pressure
on mainlane operators to re-deploy relatively smaller vessels elsewhere. This
is set to continue in 2015 with the same uneven distribution to the orderbook
schedule. Further cascading will be needed to distribute supply across the
growing trade lanes and support the freight market.
Following the approval by US authorities last year, both the 2M
and Ocean Three Alliances are reported to have started services on mainlane trade
lanes in January 2015 (Section 5). Mainlane freight rates typically performed
slightly better in 2014, although volatility was seen across the year,
particularly on the Far East-Europe route. On the Transpacific trade lanes,
Asia-US East Coastrates improved in 2014, whilst rates to the US West Coast
fell (Section 3). Nonmainlane freight rates generally fell below their 2013
average levels as a result of the supply pressures from the .cascade. effect.
On the timecharter market in 2014, earnings generally remained
at the depressed levels at which they started the year. The notable exception
was the Panamax sector which experienced a significant improvement in rates by
end 2014. The charter rate index remained unchanged at 47 points throughout
2014 (Section 8). Although the idle boxship fleet is relatively low,
representing 1.3% of the fleet at start 2015, the majority of this capacity is
charter owned; this has maintained downward pressure on charter market earnings. However, the currently limited idle
fleet combined with a thin orderbook in the smaller vessel sectors, the impact
of port congestion, and a potential slowdown of the .cascade., could help the
charter market environment.
Total container capacity is expected to grow by 4.8% in 2014 to
total 20.3m TEU, and by 5.7% in 2015. In recent years, operators have employed
both idling and slow steaming as means of absorbing excess capacity. While the
idle fleet has declined this year to the lowest level since 2011, there still
remains around 1.3% of total fleet capacity in lay-up. The high bunker price
environment has also continued to encourage operators to slow steam services.
Meanwhile, there remains a mismatch between those trade lanes which are
exhibiting the strongest growth and the size of vessels on the orderbook. While
non-mainlane trades are expected to continue to expand strongly, recent
ordering has focused on very large containerships, typically deployed on
mainlane trade routes. This has led to the redeployment of relatively smaller
vessels down the trade lane hierarchy, and this ‘cascade’ of tonnage has
increased supply pressure on the non-mainlane trades, significantly affecting
both freight rates and the charter market.
Freight rates on many trade lanes remain volatile, reflecting
continued supply pressures. This volatility is evident from the mainlane spot
rates experienced in recent months. On the non-mainlanes ‘cascading’ has been
responsible for freight rates on many trades falling year-on-year, despite
relatively healthy trade growth on many of these routes. Although container
trade expansion is set to outstrip container capacity growth in the short-term,
there remains a need for liner companies to manage supply with care.
Charter owners account for 90% of current idle capacity, and the
management of this idle fleet, in addition to the handling of the capacity
‘cascade’ by operators, will continue to have an effect on charter rate
prospects. In addition to the containership sector discussed above, the wider
liner market also includes a number of “general cargo” vessels not intended or
equipped for full loads of containers, but which supplement earnings in
specialist and niche cargo sectors by carrying containers.
Multi-Purpose (MPP) vessels are non-cellular (i.e. without
overall provision of fixed cell guides for containers) ships with box-shaped
holds and container-carrying capability. These, and the General Cargo fleet
(consisting of faster “GC Liners” and smaller “GC Tramp” vessels), operate
within niches across the liner industry and in an area shared with small
bulkers (see our Containership Register for full definitions).
Meanwhile, the Ro-Ro fleet comprises a wide range of vessels, some with cargo
handling gear (Ro-Ro/Lo-Lo), others with significant accommodation for drivers
and passengers (Ro- Pax). Even more specialized vessels in the generic Ro-Ro
fleet are PCCs (Pure Car Carriers), which are primarily designed for and
operated in the motor vehicle trades. There also remains a distinct specialized
reefer fleet, despite deep incursions made by fully cellular containerships
into this sector using refrigerated containers.
There has been a growth in volume on the Far East-Europe trade
in 2014 as compared to 2013, which is further driving increase in demand for
12,000+ TEU container ships. After shrinking by 4.2% in 2012, peak-leg volumes
increased by around 4% in 2013, and have reportedly risen by 8% y-o-y in
January-July 2014. This growth largely reflects continued improvement in
economic performance in many European countries. Overall, peak-leg Far
East-Europe trade is projected to total 15.2m TEU in 2014, up 6.5% y-o-y. Trade
on the non-peak leg from Europe to Asia is projected to increase by 3.2% to
7.0m TEU in full year 2014.
Recent demand side indicators have continued to present a mixed
picture for volume growth this year. On the Far East- Europe trade, volumes
fell by 4% in 1H 2015, and early indicators for July also appeared to be
relatively weak. Latest year to date indicators on the intra-Asia trade also
seem to be suggestive of weaker than expected expansion. While it is possible
that China’s devaluation of the yuan could help to support mainlane trade
volumes, the recent weak data points have resulted in a downward revision to
projected expansion in global container trade in 2015, to 4.6%. Volumes on the
Far East-Europe route seem likely to contract in full year 2015, and
intra-Asian trade growth is now projected to ease to below 5%, from an
estimated 6.1% in 2014. However, if recent economic events in China are
indicative of wider distress in the economy, this could lead to increased
uncertainty over trade growth projections.
Container capable supply growth is expected to reach 6.9% in
2015. The impact of the delivery of very large containerships to schedule,
combined with relatively limited levels of demolition in the year so far, has
driven rapid containership fleet growth, expected to reach 7.6% in the full
year. Improvements in mainlane freight rates in early August proved short lived
and it is expected that operators will struggle to support freight earnings for
the rest of 2015, particularly on the Far East- Europe route. Whilst charter
rates remained at improved levels compared to mid - 2014 at the end of July,
the market appears to be softening into August. However, fundamentals seem
supportive still: the sub-8,000 TEU fleet has grown by less than 1% in capacity
in 2015 so far and the idle fleet represented a relatively low 1.8% of fleet
capacity in late July.
Whilst containership investment in 2015 so far remains dominated
by the very large sector of the fleet, several other ordering trends have
appeared. A number of orders have been reported for large feeder vessels and in
June and July contracts have also been placed for ships of around 14,000 TEU –
vessels notably smaller than the 18-20,000+ TEU ships which made headlines
earlier in the year. The 113 orders reported in the year so far comprise 37 of
ships of 18,000+ TEU, 25 of 12-14,000 TEU, 14 of 8- 11,999 TEU, 18 in the
3-7,999 TEU Post-Panamax fleet and 19 in the sub-3,000 TEU class.
Seventeen boxships of 142,614 TEU were reported delivered to the
fleet in July, including nine of 8-11,999 TEU and three of 12,000+ TEU.
Containership deliveries in the opening seven months of the year totaled 1.0m
TEU, unchanged compared to the same period in 2014. Deliveries into the
sub-8,000 TEU fleet reached 0.14m TEU in the first seven months of 2015, down
27% y-o-y.
Recent
data points indicate further weakness in container trade on a number of routes
this year, reflecting economic challenges in Europe and China. Volumes on the
peak leg Far East-Europe trade fell 7.7% y-o-y in June, and the extent of the
year to date drop suggests that volumes are unlikely to rise in full year 2015.
Year to date indicators also suggest that overall growth in intra-Asian volumes
has been less firm than expected, and intra-Asian trade is now expected to
expand by 4.8% in 2015 to 50.4m TEU. However, trade on non-mainlane East-West
routes has grown robustly in the year to date, with volumes projected to rise
9.7% in 2015 to 23.7m TEU. Global container trade growth is now expected to
slow slightly to 4.6% in 2015. While the recent devaluation of the yuan could
support Chinese export growth, it is not yet clear whether any expansion will
boost total Asian exports or offset shipments from other emerging Asian
nations.
Trade
lane
|
billion
TEU Miles
|
||||||||
2007
|
2008
|
2009
|
2010
|
2011
|
2012
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015(f)
|
|
North/South
|
148.00
|
159.12
|
148.98
|
173.46
|
191.06
|
195.22
|
204.76
|
212.71
|
222.68
|
Intra-Regional/Other
|
136.62
|
150.39
|
127.94
|
146.03
|
158.48
|
170.25
|
180.74
|
192.20
|
204.70
|
Far East - Europe
|
147.35
|
146.99
|
125.34
|
146.89
|
151.77
|
145.40
|
152.95
|
164.42
|
166.98
|
Non-Mainlane East/West
|
77.21
|
85.62
|
87.02
|
100.30
|
110.73
|
114.66
|
118.73
|
127.69
|
137.13
|
Far East - North America
|
83.10
|
77.46
|
65.75
|
75.59
|
76.08
|
76.48
|
79.67
|
84.67
|
90.12
|
Europe - Far East
|
58.21
|
57.48
|
60.13
|
61.93
|
66.58
|
69.45
|
73.26
|
74.33
|
75.48
|
North America - Far East
|
38.65
|
40.69
|
40.04
|
41.48
|
43.76
|
43.60
|
45.24
|
43.19
|
42.58
|
Europe - North America
|
11.96
|
10.89
|
9.24
|
10.17
|
11.03
|
11.63
|
11.95
|
13.10
|
14.12
|
North America - Europe
|
10.48
|
10.76
|
8.06
|
8.95
|
9.26
|
8.82
|
9.00
|
8.89
|
8.72
|
GLOBAL TOTAL
|
711.58
|
739.41
|
672.50
|
764.80
|
818.75
|
835.50
|
876.29
|
921.20
|
962.49
|
Despite sprightly trade growth so far this year, the Far
East-Europe trade remains a competitive environment. Supply pressures have led
to volatile freight rates, increasingly encouraging operators to explore
potential alliances. Following the rejection of the ‘P3’ by Chinese regulators
in mid-2014, the proposed ‘2M’ and ‘Ocean Three’ [AS7] alliances plan to compete on the trade lane with the existing ‘G6’ and
‘CKYHE’[AS8] . Newbuilding interest in the 12,000+ TEU sector is likely to
remain high, as operators continue to pursue lower unit costs and greater per
TEU efficiencies. Not all carriers have yet committed so significantly to these
vessels, so many may still need to invest. Meanwhile, as the fleet of 12,000+
TEU containerships continues to expand at a rapid pace and take advantage of
upsizing opportunities, delivery of these vessels is likely to continue to lead
to redeployment of relatively smaller ships off the Far East-Europe trade. How
operators handle the rate of this cascade will remain key for the development
of freight rates on the route. Decisions by regulators over the formation of
potential alliances will also have a major influence on the environment for these
vessels. While a range of factors currently limit carriers’ ability to deploy
12,000+ TEU ships on the Transpacific, opportunities may eventually spread to
other trades (such as the Far East-Middle East) in the long-term.

Containership
market
Container
trade on the peak leg Asia-Europe route contracted
7.7% y-o-y in June, reaching 1.3m TEU, according to data
from CTS. Box volumes on this route have come under pressure
in the first half of 2015, falling 4% y-o-y to total 7.3m TEU.
Chinese exports have reportedly been weak so far this year,
with the total value of exports falling 1% y-o-y in January-July 2015,
and in mid-August, China devalued its currency by around 4% over
three days. This could potentially help to support China’s
exports, although the aggregate impact on container trade
volumes is not yet clear. In contrast to the Far East-Europe
route,
Transpacific
peak-leg volumes have continued to show strong growth in recent months, rising
by 10.4% y-o-y in June to reach 1.3m TEU. In 1H 2015, trade on this route grew
9.3% y-o-y, totalling 7.1m TEU. Data from the Shanghai Containerised
Freight Index shows that spot freight rates for boxes shipped from
Shanghai to Europe reached a six month high in late July, at $1,109/TEU, ahead
of an August 1st general rate increase. However, rates on this route fell back
to $833/TEU on August 7th, highlighting the challenges that carriers face in
maintaining rate increases. On the Shanghai-Med. route, spot freight rates also
surged in late July, to $1,119/TEU (a five month high) before falling to
$879/TEU on August 7th. On the Transpacific route, spot freight rates for
containers shipped from Shanghai to the USWC stood at $1,542/FEU on August 7th,
up 17% compared to the July average. On the Shanghai-USEC route, rates reached
$2,985/FEU on August 7th, up 7% compared to the July average.
On
the non-mainlane trade lanes, spot freight rates for containers
exported from Shanghai to Lagos reached $1,202/TEU on August
7th, down 2% compared to the July average, according to SCFI
data. Rates on the Shanghai- Santos route reached $489/TEU in
early August, 40% up on the July average. On the intra-Asian
trades, the rate on the Shanghai- East Japan route reached
$134/TEU on August 7th, up 21% compared to the July average. By late July the
total containership capacity in layup reached around 0.35m TEU,
according to Alphaliner. This represents 1.8% of the boxship fleet capacity.
This level is slightly higher compared to late June, and represents an increase
in idle capacity on ships below 3,000 TEU. Container throughput at Singapore
declined by 13% y-o-y in July to 2.6m TEU, with volumes in the first seven
months of the year down 5% y-o-y. Volumes at Hong Kong also
continued to come under pressure in July. Throughput at the port dropped 10%
y-o-y to 1.8m TEU, bringing total volumes in the year to date to 11.8m TEU,
also down 10% y-o-y.
Throughput
at Chinese ports rose 5% y-o-y in June, reaching 17.8m TEU,
and 6.5% y-o-y in 1H 2015, to 102.5m TEU. Total throughput at the
top five US East and Gulf Coast ports of Virginia,
Savannah, Houston, Charleston and New York/New Jersey rose
17% y-o-y in June to 1.5m TEU, and by 15% y-o-y in 1H 2015
to 8.4m TEU. From early August the Suez Canal began operating
with an additional 45-mile long parallel channel, allowing
two-way traffic for the first time. The expansion ends the need
for ships to wait whilst traffic passes in the opposite
direction, cutting transit times (from around 18 to 11 hours),
reducing fuel costs and increasing the Canal’s daily capacity.
The Suez Canal Authority believes it is well placed to
compete with the Panama Canal for Asian trade to the US East
Coast. However, the Panama Canal Authority is due to complete
an expansion project of its own in Q2 2016, with a new set of locks
allowing the passage of boxships of up to around 14,000 TEU.
This will allow a number of Transpacific services via Panama to
deploy much larger vessels, which could deliver unit cost savings
to operators. Operators CMA-CGM, CSCL, Hanjin, UASC
and Yang Ming are to upsize their joint service between
the Far East and the Red Sea. Ships of 8-10,000 TEU will
replace the 4,700-6,000 TEU containerships currently
operating on the service, increasing weekly capacity by around
50%. CMA-CGM has announced an upgrade to its EURAF 4
service operating between the Mediterranean and West Africa by
adding port calls in Italy, France, Malta and Spain. Two
vessels will be added to the service, bringing the total to 7 ships
of 2,200-2,700 TEU.
Table
1: Global Containership Market & Forecast: By Vessel Capacity (TEU)
2014
|
2014
|
2015
|
2015
|
2018
|
2018
|
CAGR
(2014-2020)
|
|
TEU
nominal
|
No. of Ships
|
Capacity (Million TEU)
|
No. of Ships
|
Capacity (Million TEU)
|
No. of Ships
|
Capacity (Million TEU)
|
|
18000-21000
|
15
|
0.27638
|
36
|
0.670972
|
83
|
1.591598
|
54.91%
|
13300-17999
|
81
|
1.147483
|
111
|
1.602973
|
149
|
2.142188
|
16.89%
|
10000-13299
|
169
|
2.021012
|
181
|
2.143846
|
227
|
2.650536
|
7.01%
|
7500-9999
|
404
|
3.527523
|
476
|
4.186473
|
505
|
4.453551
|
6.00%
|
5100-7499
|
501
|
3.086765
|
509
|
3.13746
|
511
|
3.15149
|
0.52%
|
4000-5099
|
745
|
3.378484
|
749
|
3.398562
|
760
|
3.447519
|
0.51%
|
3000-3999
|
255
|
0.883731
|
269
|
0.935613
|
281
|
0.978731
|
2.59%
|
2000-2999
|
649
|
1.650462
|
672
|
1.700657
|
718
|
1.813899
|
2.39%
|
1500-1999
|
575
|
0.981943
|
590
|
1.008029
|
627
|
1.073357
|
2.25%
|
1000-1499
|
679
|
0.789299
|
698
|
0.809919
|
716
|
0.830488
|
1.28%
|
500-999
|
766
|
0.568141
|
762
|
0.56388
|
764
|
0.56595
|
-0.10%
|
100-499
|
197
|
0.063076
|
190
|
0.060835
|
190
|
0.060835
|
-0.90%
|
TOTAL
|
5036
|
18.3743
|
5243
|
20.21922
|
5531
|
22.76014
|
5.50%
|
According to AlphaLiner, large capacity containerships, above 18,000
TEU are expected to grow fastest among overall containership fleet with over
50% CAGR in next 4 years. Vessels above 10,000 TEU are also expected to grow at
a very high pace. These large capacity vessels are mainly used on Far
East-Europe trade lanes, where economies of scale are perceived to offer the
greatest benefits. Only very few of large containerships above 10,000 TEU are
deployed on other trade routes, as opportunities have been generally limited by
lower volumes and infrastructure constraints. Firm deliveries of large vessels
onto the Far East-Europe trade has kept freight rates on the route under
pressure, despite operators continuing to slow steam services. While the
freight rate on the Shanghai-Europe route in the year to date is up 15% on the
2013 average at $1,267/day, rates have softened in recent months to fall below
$1,000/TEU. Meanwhile, the benchmark new build price for a 13,000 TEU box ship
stood at $115.5m at the end of August, up 2% from the end of 2013.




[AS1]Twenty foot equivalent unit.
[AS4]Find meaning
[AS5]Meaning
[AS6]Multi purpose
[AS7]Meaning.
[AS8]Meaning
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