Air freight rates stay high, despite recovering capacity and easing fuel costs
Air freight rates remain stubbornly high, despite a steady recovery in capacity as airlines, forwarders, ...
HON: DEALS ON THE MENUEXPD: NEW RECORD XPO: THE REBOUNDCAT: PAYOUT UPDHL: LIGHTHOUSEMAERSK: ANOTHER UPGRADEFWRD: HEALTHY CORRECTION R: RYDER CEO SAYS R: AMAZON LTL ANNOUNCEMENTPLD: EV INFRASTRUCTURE PUSHDHL: RAMPING UP 'NEW ENERGY LOGISTICS' GXO: NEW WINAMZN: LTL SERVICE UPDATEGM: ENERGY PROVIDER MODEL
HON: DEALS ON THE MENUEXPD: NEW RECORD XPO: THE REBOUNDCAT: PAYOUT UPDHL: LIGHTHOUSEMAERSK: ANOTHER UPGRADEFWRD: HEALTHY CORRECTION R: RYDER CEO SAYS R: AMAZON LTL ANNOUNCEMENTPLD: EV INFRASTRUCTURE PUSHDHL: RAMPING UP 'NEW ENERGY LOGISTICS' GXO: NEW WINAMZN: LTL SERVICE UPDATEGM: ENERGY PROVIDER MODEL
Airfreight could benefit from the infrastructure and resource concerns generated as the trend for companies re-shoring from China gathers pace.
After Covid supply chain disruption and amid simmering China-US tension, there is a marked effort from western firms to set up production facilities outside the people’s republic, with Vietnam the top destination for the “China+1” model.
A European shipper source told The Loadstar: “Re-shoring is very definitely happening. But with this a fairly recent phenomena, Vietnam has not had time to build adequate infrastructure for logistics facilities like ports, and with new companies pouring in, it’s very much hitting the overflow mark.”
The source noted that given this, some shippers were looking at alternatives in the region, with Thailand, Laos and “even” Burma under consideration.
Elsewhere, Mexico has also been a benefactor from the US-China trade tension, although some sources told The Loadstar they thought media coverage was “over-egging the pudding”, and that China would remain number-one.
Nonetheless, the source added: “Long-term, I think reshoring will become as pronounced as the hype, and countries will get wise to this and meet the demand. But short-term, I believe the strain on existing infrastructure will be a boon for airfreight.
“There are international companies looking at Vietnam, but so are Chinese companies that want to avoid being embroiled in geopolitical issues. And when there a problems sourcing capacity through ports and by ocean, we see air willing to step into the breach with shippers willing to pay for this.”
One site already close to capacity is northern Vietnam’s Deep-C 2 industrial site, where marketing executive Dung Bui Thi Thuy told the UK FT it was considering reclaiming land from the sea.
This, though, would not be a quick process – particularly given Vietnamese bureaucracy, the shipper source told The Loadstar.
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