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News ID: 75971 |
Publish Date: 14:17 - 29 August 2017
Drewry:

Asia to Australasia Container Traffic Heading South

Asia to Australasia container traffic experienced its first quarterly slump in at least five years, falling by 11 percent in the second quarter, shipping consultancy Drewry said.

Asia to Australasia Container Traffic Heading South
The slowdown affected both the North Asia and Southeast Asia export markets, MANA correspondent reported.
After six months trade from North Asia to Australasia was down by 3.5% to 773,000 TEU, while from Southeast Asia the slide was even steeper with container shipments down by 7.5% to 345,000 TEU.
Combined, the total southbound trade experienced close to a 5% slump in the first half of 2017.
Although the deterioration in container traffic along this corridor started early this year, things have gotten much worse of late with woeful returns for May and June accelerating the trend line downwards towards zero.
“Unless there is a drastic reversal, at the current rate the southbound trade will register an annual decline for the first time in at least five years,” according to Drewry.
The pick-up in Asia to Australia spot rates in August offers hope of a wider recovery. Nonetheless, this year looks certain to end with lower volumes.
Despite the weakness in demand, carriers have resisted making sweeping changes in capacity. Very little has happened on the supply side since May, when Hamburg Süd, Maersk Line, MOL and MSC started a new NE Asia-Oceania service (YoYo/CAE/Panda).
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