What's happening in Intra Asia

 

Intra Asia Trade Specialists 

 

CASA China Limited Shenzhen

Call Anytime, Service Anywhere.
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Maxpeed Co., Ltd

Best Global Partner - Deliver your
Happiness and Dreams
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Trans Van Line Ltd.

Total Solution, Value-Added Service, Long-Term Relationship.
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Sinostar (Shanghai) Shipping
Co., Ltd

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Herocean Line Co., Ltd

Localized global services
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ECU Guangzhou Limited Qingdao Branch

It's not just LCL - it's our passion
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Shandong Land-Sea Int'l
Transportation Co., Ltd

Customers' satisfaction is
LAND-SEA's eternal pursuance!
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ECU-Line Hong Kong Ltd.

It's not just LCL - it's our passion
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Transfit Shipping Limited.

One Stop Logistics Services Provider
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Qingdao Diggold International
Logistics Co.,Ltd.

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Panda Logistics Co., Ltd.
Qingdao Branch

Ever-lasting operation & profit
sharing
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Eternal Fortune Freight
Forwarding Co Ltd.

We are the professional LCL logistics
supplier in Tianjin.
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Zline Shipping (Shanghai)
Co. Ltd

Think Container, Think "Z"Line
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Lailon Enterprises Ltd

We adhere to the Principle of
"Customer First" and "Service Best"
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Sinokor Hongkong Co., Ltd

Sinokor is making every effort to
provide the best services to satisfy
customers' needs.
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Where the volumes are - carriers turn to intra-Asia to stay afloat
 
 
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ASEAN economies need to sort out customs and harmonise trade rules 
 
More....

Ports in Indonesia gain momentum to expedite development  More....

Intra-Asia lines need to cooperate or go bankrupt due to alarmingly low
  rates
More....

Dogged by cost, Singapore stays ahead as king of competence,
rising up the value chain

 


SINGAPORE may have lost its number one spot to Shanghai as the world's busiest container port, but it moves up the value chain into a world where tonnage means less than dollar volume produced by its own high-end electronics and pharmaceuticals that not only require high skills to make, but can also get to market.

Singapore's location is a big plus as a transshipment gateway to Asia, but it has retained more manufacturing that one would have expected, and has managed this trend-bucking accomplishment by moving up the value chain.

Combining this with the well-oiled machinery of the Singapore government that paves the way to greater output and sales, it gives on reason to be positive about the Lion City's economic prospects.

Then there is the increasing wealth of southeast Asian hinterland itself. The Straits of Malacca may be the gateway to the wider Asia-Pacific; besides, Singapore is at the centre of a region where the rise in per capita income and the development of the productive base in places like Indonesia or Thailand is also having a profound impact on the Lion City's fortunes.

"Within the ASEAN region we are seeing the growth of a middle class of 600 million people. That's greater than the three Chinese coastal cities or Latin America," said Kelvin Wong at the Singapore government's Economic Development Board.

Singapore's expansion alone over the second quarter shows a growth rate of 3.5 per cent, notes the UK's Transport Intelligence in its recent country survey. This is well down from the 5.6 per cent average posted between 2007 and 2013. But despite the Lion City's noted efficiencies, its projections are cautiously limited to two to three per cent GDP growth a year in the medium term - much like the rest of the world.

Said the government's Mr Wong: "LSPs [logistics solutions providers) need to have strategic capabilities and be able to integrate into high value supply chains and manufacturing. Many of the components produced in Singapore are at the intermediate stage, so this makes an understanding and familiarity of the product essential. So, LSPs need specialised capabilities and thus higher margin and less commoditised services."

To navigate one's economy through such tricky wind and weather, Singapore focuses on assembling complementarities, and looks to logistics services to help provide the agility needed to get their delicate wafer thin devices, vital components in the high-end electronics assembled elsewhere, so as to market ahead of the fierce competition they face. Ditto for the refined pharmaceuticals and health care products, which demand temperature control, stringently detailed regulatory compliance and must travel long distances without losing that vital state-of-art market pricing.

Electronics accounts for five per cent of Singapore GDP and 25 per cent of all manufacturing, with pharmaceuticals coming in second place. But rather than producing finished products, Singapore tends to make components, silicon wafers and hard drives for assembly operations in Thailand or China.

DHL has worked with a number of electronics companies in Singapore such as German semi-conductor manufacturer Infineon Technologies, collaborating to produce the logistics needed.

Infineon's regional supply chain director Roxane Desmicht said the high level of automation requires skilled labour, which even applies in sophisticated warehousing today where so much just-in-time assembly and dispatch is done. "This is much easier to find in Singapore than anywhere else in Asia. Uniquely you have better people, if you need a provider with EDI capability or a programme to eradicate defects, it's here," Ms Desmicht said.

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