By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Reading: Maersk cutting at least 10,000 jobs as shipping boom unravels
Share
Notification Show More
Aa
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
Aa
Search
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Follow US
© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.
OOLP Maritime World News > Shipping news > Maersk cutting at least 10,000 jobs as shipping boom unravels
Shipping news

Maersk cutting at least 10,000 jobs as shipping boom unravels

Last updated: 2023/11/04 at 6:32 PM
83 Views
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE

Shipping group A.P. Moller-Maersk, reported a steep drop in third-quarter profit and revenue on Friday and said it would cut at least 10,000 jobs in the face of overcapacity, rising costs and weaker prices, sending its shares tumbling.

Maersk, which controls about one-sixth of global container trade, transporting goods for a host of major retailers and consumer goods companies such as Walmart (NYSE:) and Nike (NYSE:), flagged a steeper downturn in demand than analysts and investors had expected.

“The new normal we are now headed into is one of more subdued macroeconomic outlook, and thus soft volume demands for the coming years, prices back in line with historical levels, inflationary pressures on our cost base, especially from energy cost, and also increased geopolitical uncertainty,” CEO Vincent Clerc said on an investor call.

- Promotional Ads -

The industry invested heavily in new container ships during and after the pandemic to meet strong demand and benefit from record freight rates. A large number of new ships entered the market since the summer with no signs of idling or scrapping, said Clerc.

“If the fourth quarter does not deliver some type of improvements, then I think we’re looking at a pretty dire situation in 2024,” he said.

Negative revenue growth in the third quarter came mainly from the retail and lifestyle sector, especially in North America, as well as automotive and technology, Clerc said.

Shares in the Copenhagen-based group slid to their lowest level in three years, trading 17.5% lower by 1141 GMT.

Jyske Bank analyst Morten Holm Enggaard said the share price was hit by Maersk saying it would reconsider whether to continue its share buy-back program into 2024.

“The only way we can read it, is that we have to look into something very bad in 2024, and probably worse than what we had expected,” said Enggaard.

Maersk said it expects global container volumes in its ocean business, its largest segment, to fall by up to 2% this year, primarily as a result of weak consumer demand and destocking by firms following the scramble for goods in the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic.

Maersk, which employed 110,000 in January, said it was in the process of cutting its workforce to below 100,000 which will result in savings of $600 million next year and beyond compared to this year.

The company kept its full-year guidance for revenue and operating profit but now expects both to land at the lower end of the range.

Operating profit dropped to $1.9 billion in the third quarter from $10.9 billion a year earlier. Revenues fell 47% to $12.1 billion.
Source: Reuters

- Promotional Ads -

You Might Also Like

India to step up coking coal shipments from Russia -sources

Australia Pacific LNG deliveries disrupted due to tanker outage

CLIA presents cruise industry’s Action Plan for Greece to the Greek Government

Baltic index extends rally on higher capesize rates

Denmark’s Maersk sells remaining share holding in Norway’s Hoegh Autoliners

admin November 4, 2023
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Copy Link Print
Previous Article A kinder way to lead at sea
Next Article OMT to strengthen contribution to the decarbonization of the shipping industry
- Promotional Ads -

Latest News

India to step up coking coal shipments from Russia -sources
Shipping news November 28, 2023
Nigeria Reports 3,000-Barrel Spill From Total’s Egina FPSO
Global Maritime News November 28, 2023
Aegean Shipping orders its first LR2 ice-class newbuilds
Global Maritime News November 28, 2023
Pier B Rail Facility Project Meeting Set for Dec. 6
Port news November 28, 2023

OOLP maritime news is a portal that gets latest updates and happenings from the maritime & cruise industry across the globe.

Top maritime stories

Global maritime news

International shipping news

Cruise news

Maritime ports

Security and piracy

About OOLP news

Contact us

Live maritime traffic

Events

Blog

Follow US
© 2023 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?