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© Flynt

Consolidation in container shipping is eroding shippers’ trust in the sector.

There are calls for carriers to improve transparency in their dealings with customers.

MDS Transmodal chairman Mike Garratt told delegates at Intermodal Europe in Rotterdam this week that work was needed to rebuild bridges between container lines and their customers.

“We need to see a better relationship and to address the mistrust between both sides,” he said.

“From their perspective, lines could help by becoming more transparent, but consolidation has played a big part in this.”

A report conducted by consultant McKinsey last year found that mergers and the reshuffling of alliances were having a profound impact on shippers.

While M&A activity is not a new phenomenon, the consultancy described the spate of mergers over the past two years or so as an “unprecedented flurry”.

“Shippers see a widening gap between the service they’d like to receive from container lines and the service they actually get,” said the report. “They also tell us the new operating environment, complicated by the alliance shifts, has adversely affected their supply chains.”

Since 2016, there have been five major mergers, including Cosco’s acquisition of OOCL, Maersk and Hamburg Süd and Hapag-Lloyd buying UASC.

The top five carriers now control some 73% of all volumes, and when the Cosco-OOCL deal completes, they will have some 67% of total capacity.

In a discussion with The Loadstar on the sidelines of Tiaca’s ACF in Toronto last month, secretary general of the Global Shippers’ Forum (GSF) James Hookham hit out at the alliance structure.

“There are fewer places for shippers to go; where is the easyJet and Ryanair of container shipping?,” he asked. “Where is the disruptor to legacy operators that you’ve seen in aviation? They make it very difficult for new companies to enter the market.”

Mr Hookham’s comments were echoed by GSF chairman Sean van Dort who said: “The phrase ‘the customer is always right’ has been thrown out of the window in shipping.”

McKinsey noted that in the years leading up to the wave of consolidation, shippers made substantial cost savings. Oversupply and dwindling freight rates led to some $23bn in savings between 2010 and 2015, but it seemed these savings did not offset the problems associated with low rates.

And it is not just container lines that have been singled out, Mr Garratt noted that feeder service consolidation was also receiving flack.

“In 2006, the top three feeder operators were independent, now in 2018 only one of the top five can claim any sort of independence,” he said.

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  • Gary Ferrulli

    November 09, 2018 at 2:53 pm

    The container carrier industry reflects one that has a 3% rate of return for over 4 decades. Thus the consolidations, alliances, joint services. The adage you get what you pay for couldn’t be truer. Cargo interests get low rates and mediocre services.
    And the complaints are poor service and screams when carrier try to raise rates.
    The two are directly connected. Carriers may not be the most customer friendly, although the low rates seems to be a part of the equation; and shippers are partially responsible for the poor services, they won’t pay for them.

    • Andy Lane

      November 10, 2018 at 2:29 pm

      Just about spot-on. The shippers did not (per se) drive the price down, but they did benefit from it – since 2008. The Lines entered the race to the bottom, that race continues. It has distracted them from improving service quality, which is just what it is. The focus has been elsewhere. There is no place for the EasyJet or RyanAir, because the top 10 already do that. What is really required is SIA Business Class – but who will stump-up and pay the premium?

      • Gary Ferrulli

        November 11, 2018 at 3:08 pm

        Great point Andy. The rate of return etc is virtually all self inflicted wounds by
        carriers. History is repetitive on that. A lot of it to do with the fact that many in the past and a few today are heavily subsidized by their governments. Those governments who got out of subsidies (US, Latin America, Middle East, Europe,
        Australasia) the carriers are gone. You have 4 Europeans, one of which still gets some governments help, and the Koreans, Chinese, Taiwanese and Japanese who get significant amounts(Billions in the case of China and Korea). Many will say “so what?”, what profit motive do they have? Or are they national security blankets for local manufacturers and other business interests while also employing tens or hundreds of thousands. They say all politics is local, this is great example.
        But the point is that until the commercial carriers make enough profit to improve services, they won’t. And the fuel price issue is perfect example, all know what has happened to it and what Jan. 2020 will bring. But nothing but complaints by shippers about recovering those significant additional costs.

  • YM

    November 11, 2018 at 12:26 pm

    recall when EU abolished the liner conference citing it will encourage competiveness; see what happens now