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3L-Leemark Logistics Limited

Where there's 3L, there's a way!
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Odyssey International (HK) Ltd.

We can provide excellent services
in order to meet customers'
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Tianjin Shengyuanyujia
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Orient Express Container
(HK) Co., Ltd.

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CASA China Limited Shenzhen

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Qingdao Wintrust logistics
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Worldex Logistics Qingdao Co., Ltd.

Logistics Service Provider
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T & H Logistics (HK) Co., Ltd.

Provide multi-models cargo
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Fast-Link Express Ltd.

Link to Fast-Link, link all over the
world
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TES Logistic & Transport
(International) Ltd 

We are not the big one but prefer
and knee to be one of the best
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The covert consolidation of the container shipping industry

 


THE container shipping industry lost US$4.7 billion in 2012 on top of a loss of $5.97 billion in 2011, reports Alphaliner.

This is in addition to the $20 billion loss during the financial crisis of 2009. The industry did rebound in 2010, however, the approximately $13 billion profit in that one year alone has easily been wiped out since.

Based on the above figures we can see that the industry is between $17 billion and $18 billion in the hole. These losses simply cannot continue. There will surely be consequences for the shipping lines going forward if this does not change, and soon.

In this publication we have raised the question several times before on whether continued losses will lead to consolidation in the form of acquisitions. The answer at this stage appears to be no, at least not in any significant way.  

However, there is a more subtle form of consolidation that we have not looked at to date. This consolidation comes in the form of creeping market shares, as the bigger companies become bigger at the expense of the smaller ones.

This is what we will look at today in Hong Kong Shipping Gazette...

In the below table we can see the fleet size of the industry's 10 largest players from the beginning of the expansion of container shipping in the 19080s to the present day.

 click image to enlarge

From the above table it is clear that much has changed in the past 33 years. In fact only three carriers have maintained their top 10 position, in terms of active capacity, over this time - Evergreen, Maersk Line and APL. However, even two out of those three companies, Maersk and APL, are very different companies today from what they were then after their various mergers and acquisitions.

Interestingly Hong Kong's OOCL was listed in the top 10 previously, but has since dropped out of the rankings. Nevertheless, it has been one of the most consistently profitable shipping companies in the world over the past few decades, regardless of the wider economic situation of the market.

We can also see that the world's second and third largest shipping lines by capacity today, MSC and CMA CGM, were nowhere to be seen until 2001 after which time both have grown tenfold - which is extraordinary growth.

From the 1980s through to today the world's containership fleet, in terms of capacity, has grown almost 24 times over.

What also has changed in the industry is the size of the vessels deployed. We can see in the below graph that in 1980 the average vessel size for the top 10 shipping lines in the world was 1,283 TEU. If we look even closer to focus on the top five and top three carriers as well the average vessel size ranged from around 1,200 TEU to 1,500 TEU.

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