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: Xeneta: Global Long-Term Container Rates Arrest Decline In February, Buoyed By Surge In Us Export Rates
Share
Notification Show More
Latest News
NORDEN enters Capesize segment | Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide
Shipping news
CMA CGM lodges bid to run Lebanon’s postal services
Global Maritime News
Konecranes’ new Zero4 program to receive EUR 70 million from Business Finland to unlock industrial productivity
Port news
Spot market steady; more April tenders underway
Shipping news
US Navy Donates its Last Two Cyclone-Class Patrol Ships to Philippines
Global Maritime News
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
Ā© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.
OOLP Maritime World News > Top stories > Xeneta: Global Long-Term Container Rates Arrest Decline In February, Buoyed By Surge In Us Export Rates
Top stories

Xeneta: Global Long-Term Container Rates Arrest Decline In February, Buoyed By Surge In Us Export Rates

Last updated: 2023/02/28 at 8:30 PM
51 Views
Share
5 Min Read
SHARE



After the record-breaking falls of January, global long-term ocean freight rates held up surprisingly well in February, boosted by ā€œa special monthā€ for US exports. According to the latest data from the Xeneta Shipping Index (XSIĀ®), average long-term contracted rates dropped by just 1% across the month, following on from a 13.3% month-on-month collapse in January. Despite the relatively strong performance, seen against a backdrop of weak fundamentals, Xeneta notes that this is the now the sixth consecutive month of falls, with the index losing 22% of its value since August 2022.

All eyes on TPM

ā€œGiven the lack of demand, challenging macro-economic conditions, deflated spot rates, and rampant industry overcapacity, observers may have expected a continuation of the steep downward trend for long-term contracts,ā€ comments Xeneta CEO Patrik Berglund. ā€œHowever, a powerhouse performance for the US export benchmark, with a 16.5% appreciation, arrested the decline, pushing that particular corridor to an all-time high.ā€

He continues: ā€œThat said, one stand-out performer should not cloud the big market picture. If we look across the rest of the trade lanes the development remains clear for all to see. The drops may not be as dramatic as we saw last month, but there’s still some sizable declines on the world’s leading corridors. So, it remains a very challenging situation for carriers fighting to secure cargoes, and that should continue to impact upon rates going forwards. It’ll be interesting to see what happens at TPM this week, which will operate as a focal point for new contract negotiations.ā€

Falling stars

- Advertisement -

The XSI®’s regional data gives credence to Berglund’s analysis. Aside from the US export rates growth, the majority of arrows point resolutely downwards. The US import sub-index fell by 3.9%, but is still 79.86% up against this time last year. Two of the routes that make up this XSIĀ® defied the overall trend, with the South American East Coast – US East Coast and the Southern part of Africa – US East Coast showing their first growth since November 2022 (by 13% and 8% respectively).

Patrik Berglund, Xeneta CEO

The Far East saw both benchmarks drop, with import rates declining 4.4% (up 13% year-on-year) and the all-important export XSIĀ® dropping by 4.6%. Although this latter figure has fallen consistently over recent months it remains a ā€œmightyā€ 244.5% up compared to the per-pandemic days of January 2020.

Continental shifts

- Advertisement -

In Europe there was a break in the economic clouds for the import XSIĀ®, which moved up 3.5% on the back of strong import rates in to the Mediterranean Sea from the US East and West Coasts (with the average of all valid long term rates rising by 86% and 49% respectively). The benchmark is now 31.6% up year-on-year. Exports moved in the opposite direction, with this XSIĀ® dropping by 2.6% (up 65.3% from February 2022). Xeneta’s data showed steady declines across the board, with exports out of the Mediterranean Sea to Korea and Japan falling the most.

Although there’s little for the carriers to cheer in the latest figures, Berglund notes that a sense of perspective is important when assessing current market falls.

Long-term strength

ā€œSix months of declining rates is, naturally, of great concern to the carrier community, as is the fact that fundamentals remain challenging for the immediate future,ā€ he states. ā€œBut it’s not as if the shippers are suddenly seeing ā€˜bargain’ prices for their cargoes. Yes, they have the upper hand in negotiations, especially with the fact that spot rates are so depressed, but relatively speaking long-term contracts remain historically high.

ā€œEven with the current downward trajectory, the global XSIĀ® remains 43.0% up year-on-year. And when we go back to January 2020 rates have climbed by 207.7%. So, even if the future is uncertain for carriers, at least the rates are falling from a position of real strength. Time, and the data, will tell how long they can stay that way.ā€
Source: Xeneta



You Might Also Like

Global inflationary trends influence patterns of cargo crime

Xeneta: Global Long-Term Container Rates Down By A Quarter Since August 2022

Will the Financial ā€œStormā€ Have an Impact in Shipping?

New destinations for Russian products to boost product tanker shipping demand

admin February 28, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Copy Link Print
Previous Article Maritime milestone as four Meghna bulk carriers flag off
Next Article Imabari Builds World’s First Ship Using Kobe’s Low CO2 Steel
- Advertisement -

Latest News

NORDEN enters Capesize segment | Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide
Shipping news March 31, 2023
CMA CGM lodges bid to run Lebanon’s postal services
Global Maritime News March 31, 2023
Konecranes’ new Zero4 program to receive EUR 70 million from Business Finland to unlock industrial productivity
Port news March 31, 2023
Spot market steady; more April tenders underway
Shipping news March 31, 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

Ā© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.

  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?