What's happening in Europe

 

Europe Trade Specialists 

 

Globelink Int'l Freight
Forwarding (HK) Ltd.

In Unity, We Link The Globe!
More....

 

Greencarrier Asia Ltd.

Yes, it's possible!
More....

 

Sea-Air Logistics (HK) Ltd.

Committed to the highest in industry
standards to meet your needs
More....


AEL-Berkman Forwarding
(HK) Ltd.

Global Logistics, Personal Support
More....

 

Lucky Freight (HK) Ltd.

Devotion Creates Professionalization
More....

 

Odyssey International (HK) Ltd. 

We can provide excellent services
in order to meet customers'
satisfaction.
More....

 

MBS Logistics (Shanghai)
Limited

Your World's Local Forwarder
More...
.
 

Qingdao Wintrust logistics
Co., Ltd

Eager to progress - we serve
costumers honestly and approved
by vast majority of customers
More....

 

Worldex Logistics Qingdao
Co., Ltd.

Logistics Service Provider
More....

 

Panda Logistics Co., Ltd.
Qingdao Branch

Ever-lasting operation & profit
sharing
More....

 

 


 China revives European shipper hopes of a shortcut across the Malay
   Peninsula
  
More....

 European Commission shipping study recommends more study of
   sector threats
  
More....

 Improving European relations with Russia proves to be fraught with
   risk - yet promise  
More....

 With MSC and OOCL direct calls, Port of Gothenburg's assets accumulate
   rapidly  
More....
 

 

Coping with the Asia-Europe new normal means mega ships and
low bunker prices

 


CONTAINER carriers, on the Asia-Europe run, were pushing hard to sustain occasional gains in freight rates ahead of the Chinese New Year on February 8 while all the while knowing that these gains will not last.

Instead of entertaining such quixotic hopes, what must be done now is subtract those costs that unnecessarily undermine profitability, namely terminal handling costs through total automation and regulatory compliance costs through broadly effected by political and "industrial action", in the trade union sense of the term.

Like many others, Fort Lauderdale's Maritime Executive, on the occasion of what has become a monthly spike in spot rates, takes the view that carriers should act now to lock in higher prices early - as if there was any chance of doing so.

These momentary spike in rates, however, are always short lived. A pattern, again and again repeated shows that when price increases are introduced, spot rate rises sharply, only to fall again when shippers shop around, and the carriers' sales teams lose heart and return to the old practice of filling the ship at any price.

From what is leaking out of longer-term contract talks, indications are that longer-term deals are following the declining trend in spot rates, perhaps reflecting a "new normal" of lower prices.

What is not discussed much in the context of low rates is the role of low oil, which appears to be the lynchpin of yet another "new normal".  Nor is low oil discussed in context of mega-ships, which unlike the oversupply of panamax and subpanamax vessels, is here to stay.

The inevitable steady scrapping of tonnage will continue from year to year, but the presence of the 10,000- to 20,000 TEUers will be a permanent feature of the Asia-Europe trade, widening their use in America, as shown by the recent docking on the US west coast by the 18,000-TEU CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin.

These giants are no longer the freaks of the sea; but increasingly commonplace and are beginning to form the fabric of another aspect of this many faceted new normal.

As bunker costs have taken care of themselves in what appears to be a permanent oil glut, and crew costs stabilise as bigger ships appear to need fewer men, these factors feed into the new normal.

It has been pointed out that what wiggle room there was in cost cutting to compensate for rock bottom rates, has been exhausted.

Except for two areas where some can be found, but neither will be easy to tap. One is shoreside labour, expressed in terminal handling charges. and the other is regulatory compliance cost. Both must be confronted. And confronted is the proper term.

There is no social justice reason why unskilled and semi-skilled workers must be paid considerably more than doctors and lawyers as dockers are in the United States - or in Europe where they demand jobs for life as dockers unions demands. It is not the value of their services that profits them, but rather their commanding position at the chokepoints of world trade.

In the same way, but less obviously, the ever growing regulatory bodies accumulate like barnacles to befoul world shipping, egregiously pitting larger companies against smaller ones because only the big boys can pay the compliance costs, causing smaller players to disappear, thus enlarging the market share for larger operators. Regulators compel all to use costly equipment, which many do not want. Soon best practice becomes must practices on pain of fines and even jail.


 Page  1  2  [Next] 

* - Indicate required field(s).

What can you add or subtract to the opinions expressed above?
What problems and you see arising from what has been
proposed?
 

* Message:


* Email :