Container volumes recover after falling 7.3% in first 5 months of this year

Container shipping has proved to be remarkably resilient in 2020 in terms of volumes as well as freight rates despite the alarming headlines in the spring of last year.

After a 5 million TEU (7.3 per cent) drop in volumes in the first five months of the year, volumes were down by only 1.7 per cent – a loss of 2.6 million TEU – by the end of November.

Of the three largest trades, Far East to North America has been the best performing, up by 1.1 million TEU (6.4 per cent) in the first 11 months of the year. The last few months have been the strongest for this trade, managing to more than make up for lost volumes in the early months of the year. This has caused problems for supply chains as the rush of containers have overwhelmed some ports.

Container volumes during Chinese New Year will be different than ever before

Despite the fact that container volumes have been stronger in the last few months of 2020 than they were in 2019, both the Intra-Asia and Far East to Europe trades, they remain in negative territory when looking at it on an accumulated basis: down by 1.3 per cent and 5.3 per cent respectively.

Peter Sand, BIMCO’s chief shipping analyst, said: “BIMCO now expects global container volumes to have fallen by less than 1.5 per cent in 2020 , which is far better than what we anticipated when the pandemic raged in Q2, although even this figure hides how profitable a year it has in fact been for liner companies.

“Looking ahead, the coming quarters will see a strong focus on the repositioning of empties and even out the imbalanced caused by the stop-n-go demand of 2020. Furthermore, focus will now turn towards the Chinese New Year, which is set to be different to any other in terms of both celebrations and exports.”

Copyright 2016 HKSG Group Media Ltd.