GENERAL manager of Taiwan's major shipping liner Evergreen, Eric Hsieh, says China's abolition of its zero-Covid policy will stimulate factory output, leading to a recovery in container shipping this year.
According to Mr Hsieh, freight rate erosion has already begun to slow on many trades and, in some cases, there has been a freight rate bounce, reports London's Loadstar.
He said: 'We expect freight rates to be lower than in the past two years, but the rate of the fall will slow.'
The easing of lockdowns in China has seen a rebound in freight volumes since November, which has helped to stabilise rates.
'Cargo volumes have picked up and our fleet utilisation is much better than in November. There is a chance that freight rates could recover this month, and there shouldn't be a need for pessimism before the Chinese new year,' said Mr Hsieh.
He added: 'We aren't worried by the recent correction in container freight rates and we're sticking to our expansion plans to boost our competitiveness.'
But Mr Hsieh did acknowledge there were long-running concerns of overcapacity. Alphaliner has forecast container shipping supply to grow by about 8 per cent in 2023, with demand rising by just 2.7 per cent.
However, he thinks increasingly stringent environmental regulations, such as the need for owners and operators to start meeting the requirements of the Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII), could affect about 10 per cent of capacity, so the tonnage overhang 'may not be as serious as imagined'.
And Russia's invasion of Ukraine remains another factor, he said. 'As soon as the conflict is over, the global economy will rebound. The cold wind blows the fallen leaves, and I am eagerly looking forward to the return of prosperity.'
Backing this optimistic outlook, the Taiwanese liner operator is going ahead with expansion. Mr Hsieh unveiled plans to order 40,000 more containers - after having spent US$51.53 million on 9,800 new dry containers and 6,171 used boxes from Evergreen's Singapore subsidiary - and $65.24 million to buy 7,800 reefers from Dong Fang International Container.
Evergreen also purchased its Singapore unit's office for $32 million to operate its own agency in the South-east Asian city-state, as the group expects delivery of 51 ships over the next two years.
Mr Hsieh noted that, with just three weeks to go before the Chinese New Year holiday begins on January 23, Evergreen ships plying the Pacific have been fully loaded and lines will attempt to impose a GRI of $1,000-$2,000 per FEU this month.
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According to Mr Hsieh, freight rate erosion has already begun to slow on many trades and, in some cases, there has been a freight rate bounce, reports London's Loadstar.
He said: 'We expect freight rates to be lower than in the past two years, but the rate of the fall will slow.'
The easing of lockdowns in China has seen a rebound in freight volumes since November, which has helped to stabilise rates.
'Cargo volumes have picked up and our fleet utilisation is much better than in November. There is a chance that freight rates could recover this month, and there shouldn't be a need for pessimism before the Chinese new year,' said Mr Hsieh.
He added: 'We aren't worried by the recent correction in container freight rates and we're sticking to our expansion plans to boost our competitiveness.'
But Mr Hsieh did acknowledge there were long-running concerns of overcapacity. Alphaliner has forecast container shipping supply to grow by about 8 per cent in 2023, with demand rising by just 2.7 per cent.
However, he thinks increasingly stringent environmental regulations, such as the need for owners and operators to start meeting the requirements of the Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII), could affect about 10 per cent of capacity, so the tonnage overhang 'may not be as serious as imagined'.
And Russia's invasion of Ukraine remains another factor, he said. 'As soon as the conflict is over, the global economy will rebound. The cold wind blows the fallen leaves, and I am eagerly looking forward to the return of prosperity.'
Backing this optimistic outlook, the Taiwanese liner operator is going ahead with expansion. Mr Hsieh unveiled plans to order 40,000 more containers - after having spent US$51.53 million on 9,800 new dry containers and 6,171 used boxes from Evergreen's Singapore subsidiary - and $65.24 million to buy 7,800 reefers from Dong Fang International Container.
Evergreen also purchased its Singapore unit's office for $32 million to operate its own agency in the South-east Asian city-state, as the group expects delivery of 51 ships over the next two years.
Mr Hsieh noted that, with just three weeks to go before the Chinese New Year holiday begins on January 23, Evergreen ships plying the Pacific have been fully loaded and lines will attempt to impose a GRI of $1,000-$2,000 per FEU this month.
SeaNews Turkey