Transpacific contract rates rise on Trump’s fickle policies
Shippers exasperated with the constant flip-flops in the Trump administration’s trade policy have agreed to ...
Ahead of the traditional transpacific annual contract rate negotiating season, there seems no slowing of Asia-US container spot rate erosion.
The failure of ocean carriers to halt the decline by capacity management blank sailing programmes– at the same time counterintuitively heavily discounting short-term rates – has left the transpacific lines exposed to conceding huge reductions in tenders for new contracts commencing in May.
This week saw the Freightos Baltic Exchange (FBX) Asia to US west coast component shed another 4.6%, to $1,181 ...
Amazon pushes into LTL for small package fulfilment and UPS does a u-turn
New senior management for DSV as it readies for DB Schenker takeover
Volumes set to 'fall off a cliff' as US firms hit the brakes on sourcing and bookings
Asian exporters scramble for ships and boxes to beat 90-day tariff pause
Temporary tariff relief brings on early transpacific peak season
'Tariff madness' will prompt renegotiation of ocean shipping contracts
Forwarders 'allowing the fox into the chicken run' by supporting 'hungry' carriers
Response to tariffs by Chinese importers may see extra costs for US shippers
Comment on this article
Marc Greenberg
February 24, 2023 at 2:35 pmComplete lack of discipline by the ocean liners continues to roil markets. Last year is was the complete lack of reality and a disregard for the customer or the trade that also roiled markets. It is obvious that global oversight of carrier behavior is needed to address such radical market volatility. This “get what you can when you can” attitude swings in two directions and cuts markets like a freshly sharpened knife. When does the shipping community say its enough and institute global regulation to control carrier behavior to stabilize markets. We live in a global village today and these bad actors are running free creating chaotic and undependable markets – not good for business anywhere!