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International Shipping
Box rates to US top US$10,000/FEU as shipping crunch tightens
Date:2021-07-20 Readers:
CONTAINER shipping rates from Asia to the US and Europe increased to new record levels over the past week, ensuring transportation costs will stay elevated for companies heading into a peak season for rebuilding inventories, reports Bloomberg.

The spot rate for a 40-foot container from Shanghai to Los Angeles increased to a record US$9,733, up 1 per cent from the previous week and 236 per cent higher than a year ago, according to the Drewry World Container Index published late last week. The Shanghai-to-Rotterdam rate rose to $12,954. The composite index, reflecting eight major trade routes, hit $8,883, a 339 per cent surge from a year ago.

Among the reasons for the tight market: a persistent shortage of containers along the busy transpacific lane carrying American imports. Goods in containers are flooding into the biggest US gateway for seaborne trade at five times the volume of steel boxes full of exports.

"The backlog of getting containers, getting the product, getting it on the ships and just the delays in getting any of those products is significant today," Clarence Smith, chairman and CEO of Atlanta-based Haverty Furniture Cos, said during a recent investor conference.

Asked how long he expects the supply problems to last, Mr Smith said: "I'm hearing it's going to go into next year. I don't see it really getting better this year, maybe a little bit better. We're having to pay premiums to get containers."

The Port of Los Angeles last Wednesday said loaded container imports totalled 467,763 TEU in June, while exports fell to 96,067 TEU, the lowest level since 2005. At Long Beach, import volume rose 18.8 per cent to 357,101 TEU last month, with exports dipping 0.5 per cent to 116,947 TEU.

Combined, imports into both ports last month were up 13.3 per cent from the same month in 2019.

Meanwhile, the number of anchored container ships waiting to discharge cargo at LA-Long Beach stood at 18 as of last Wednesday, compared with 20 a week earlier, according to officials who monitor harbour traffic. That bottleneck has persisted since late last year, peaking around 40 vessels in early February.
LA port executive director Gene Seroka said during a press briefing that the demand for consumer goods looks to stay solid for the rest of the year.

"Fall fashion, back-to-school items and Halloween goods are arriving on our docks, and some retailers are shipping year-end holiday products early," Mr Seroka said. "All signs point to a robust second half of the year."

Long Beach executive director Mario Cordero said that while the port expects e-commerce to drive cargo movement through the rest of 2021, volumes might be peaking. "June serves as an indicator that consumer demand for goods will gradually level off as the national economy continues to open up and services become more widely available," Mr Cordero said.


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