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Will a merger between Germany's two premier container
carriers materialise?

 


THE two leading German container carriers - Hapag-Lloyd (HL) and Hamburg Sud (HS) - are in tie-up talks to create the world's fourth largest container carrier after Denmark's Maersk Line, Switzerland's MSC, and CMA CGM of France.

The two carriers announced on December 18 that they were investigating if and under what conditions a merger would be beneficial to each other.

If the merger materialises, the new HL+HS group will be a giant carrier with a fleet of 250 vessels with an annual revenues of more than EUR10 billion (US$13 billion), according to Germany's Der Spiegel.

The combination seems naturally fit for both carriers. Der Spiegel said the two carriers would "complement each other well" because Hapag-Lloyd specialises in major Asia-Europe and transpacific trades, while Hamburg Sud focuses on services to North and South America, one of the fastest-growing emerging markets today.

The two shipping lines are among the top 15 carriers in the world. According to Alphaliner Top 100, Hapag-Lloyd ranks sixth with a container market share of 3.8 per cent, while Hamburg Sud is 12th with 2.5 per cent market share.

The merger would create the world's fourth largest container carrier.

Maritime analyst Alphaliner said the combined capacity of Hapag-Lloyd (634,000 TEU) and of Hamburg Sud (416,000 TEU) would reach 1.5 million TEU, accounting for 6.2 per cent of the global capacity.

In contrast, Maersk Line, the world's largest carrier, currently absorbs 15.4 per cent market share with a total capacity of 2.6 million TEU; MSC, the world's number two carrier, possesses a market share of 13.3 per cent with 2.2 million TEU, and CMA CGM, the number three carrier, has 8.3 per cent with 1.4 million TEU.

Initial comments from industry analysts are positive.

SeaIntel analyst and CEO Lars Jensen told Denmark's ShippingWatch that the merger of the two largest German carriers would form a "formidable player on the market to and from South America," as well as on the entire reefer segment.

"As opposed to Hapag-Lloyd, Hamburg Sud has an extensive order book, consisting of 40 per cent of the tonnage employed by the shipping company. Over the next year, Hamburg Sud will take delivery of a series of 10 ships, of just under 10,000 [TEU]. The shipping company has a very high intake of reefer containers, and thus the shipping company, with 1,700 reefer outlets on its ships, matches the major reefer-designated ships that Maersk Line has acquired for the routes to South America," Mr Jensen said.

 

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