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International Shipping
HSBC forecasts container shipping to hit bottom in mid-2023
Date:2022-10-17 Readers:
HSBC's global head of shipping & ports & ports research, Parash Jain, has forecast that container freight rates are expected to hit a trough in mid-2023 as spot rates fall at 7.5 per cent a week.

Mr Jain was one of the first to flag a sharp decline ahead in container shipping's fortunes at the start of September when he predicted shipping lines profits would plunge by 80 per cent in 2023-24.

Far from being overly negative as some in the industry felt at the time Mr Jain has now accelerated the timeline for the sector to hit bottom after spot rates have tumbled far quicker than anyone expected, reports UK's Seatrade Maritime News.

In a research note entitled "Fast and furious" HSBC noted spot rates reported by the Shanghai Containerized Freight Index (SCFI) had fallen by 51 per cent since the end of July - a decline of 7.5 per cent per week.

It was also highlighted that spot rates were now well below the levels of contract rates entered into at the start of 2022, especially on the Transpacific trade.

"In fact, at this pace of a 7.5 per cent week-on-week decline, spot rates may hit the average spot rates of 2019 by the end of 2022, a level where we expect capacity discipline to meaningfully emerge, especially when rates go below cash costs," Mr Jain said.

HSBC has brought forward its expected trough of freight rates to mid-2023 from 2024 with a lower demand forecast and a higher than expected effective capacity increase due to the unwinding of congestion. Sector profitability is set to hit bottom in second half 2023.

The analyst expects Q3 2022 earnings to remain resilient, but profit guidance statements may provide clues as to whether lines have been able to defend contract rates in renegotiations.

"The reactivation of capacity after the Golden Week period versus extended blanked sailings will likely determine whether freight rates stabilize any time soon," the research note said.

HSBC has cut profit estimates for listed container lines for 2022-24 by up to 51 per cent.

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