Global Freight Rates Plunge, Report Finds
Average global freight rates have fallen to a 15-month low, according to Drewry’s new online Container Freight Rate Insight.
Drewry’s Global Freight Rate Index fell 12% in April to reach its lowest level since February 2012, when container shipping was still recovering from the last ocean carrier price war. The Index, which is a weighted average of freight rates across the 600 trade routes covered by Drewry’s Container Freight Rate Insight, reached a new low of $2,065 per 40ft and has fallen 18% since the start of the year.
The index was depressed by a fall in pricing on the high volume trades from Asia to both Europe and North America, where average rates fell 12% apiece across both trades in April.
Over half of the 600 trade routes covered by Drewry’s Container Freight Rate Insight recorded falling rates in April. And pricing is now below last year’s levels on over one third of trade routes.
Pricing has fallen steadily on the Asia-Europe trade since the GRI of mid-March. This week the World Container Index benchmark from Shanghai to Rotterdam fell below $1,400 per 40ft for the first time since February 2012, shedding as much as 13% to $1,335 per 40ft.
Meanwhile, eastbound transpacific pricing has retreated since the April 1 GRI, with Drewry’s benchmark rate between Hong Kong and Los Angeles falling below $2,000 per 40ft for the first time since March 2012 to $1,884 per 40ft.
“Drewry believes that until carriers take the necessary action to correct capacity, freight rates will remain under pressure,” warned Martin Dixon, research manager for freight rate benchmarking at Drewry. “We reiterate our view that carriers will need to remove at least two service strings from the Asia-Europe trade for rates to recover.”
Other trades contributing to the fall in Drewry’s Global Freight Rate Index were the westbound transpacific and imports into South America, Africa and Oceania. There were precious few risers other than Middle East imports, South Asian exports and northbound African rates.
“Cascading of surplus tonnage off overburdened East-West trades is depressing rates on once buoyant North-South and regional trades,” Dixon added.
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