Drewry: Large Containership Orders May Ruin Recovery

Sustainable ocean container shipping profitability may be lost if CMA CGM’s order for nine 22,000 TEU ships goes ahead, according to Drewry's latest Container Insight Weekly.  

The over-supplied container shipping sector, which recently surpassed a global fleet capacity of 20 million TEU, may be tipped over the edge if companies start playing catch-up with large vessel orders.
Drewry's graph (below) shows the extent of the problem as the sector is expected to gain an additional 3 million TEU by the end of 2020, with 40% of new deliveries in the 18,000-plus TEU range delivered before 2019.
Drewry stated: “Adding even more ships to this top-heavy pool will make the task of deployment and cascading harder than it already is.
“How much damage these ships might do to the supply and demand balance will depend on the prevailing conditions at the time of their delivery.
“We assume they will arrive after 2019 when the order book will have mostly played out, while increasing cargo flows and greater scraping could also mitigate their impact.
“Yet, while these ships on their own will not significantly alter the supply-demand dynamics, it will become more of a problem for the industry if herd mentality kicks in and others follow.”
Drewry said that the unconfirmed CMA CGM order suggested that some carriers are being driven by growing market share after the recent industry trend of paying off debt.
It concluded: “As compelling as the individual case may be, no carrier operates in a bubble and should this order become reality there could well be some hidden costs that CMA CGM and all of its cohorts will have to bear.
“From an industry perspective, there is simply no good reason to add these ships to already overcrowded oceans.”

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