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Saturday, 2 April 2016

Consolidations M&A & Alliances in Container shipping & its impact

The container shipping industry is facing testing times ahead…!
The container shipping industry has been witnessing a wave of mergers and acquisitions  - a phase of consolidation among top lines. We can also expect that there will be major changes in the alliances.
Realignment of major global alliances can now be expected considering
1.   merger of the container fleets of Cosco and China Shipping
2.   CMA CGM’s acquisition of APL.

Alliances which can undergo changes will be
1.   CKYHE Alliance - as Cosco is part of the CKYHE Alliance,
2.   O3 alliance as China Shipping is part of the Ocean 3 Alliance
3.   G6 APL is part of the G6 Alliance.

New alliance structure could be:
1.   2M (Maersk, MSC) – this alliance hopefully will be strong as it had been signed for next 10 years!
2.   G6 (OOCL, Hapag-Lloyd, NYK, Hyundai, MOL, Hamburg Sud);
3.   KYHE (“K” Line, Yang Ming, Evergreen, Hanjin);
4.   O5 (CMA CGM, CSCL, UASC, APL, Cosco) which will be called O3

As a result, all three of these alliances will undergo some kind of reconfiguration as carriers switch in and out of them over the next year or more.

Why consolidation?
1.   Consolidation should help in having the required fleet size to remain competitive
2.   Overcapacity which has brought the freight rates down to 1/3 rd of previous year 2015.
As per Drewry, we can expect 1.3 million twenty-foot-equivalent units of capacity to hit the water by 2017,
Also 1.60 million TEUs of new capacity would be added to the fleet in 2016,  which is a 7 % growth.  Overcapacity is a serious issue and this is leading to savage rate wars leading to consecutive losses for major shipping lines between 2010 - 2015.
Drewry’s Global Supply/Demand Index — a measure of the relative balance of vessel capacity and cargo demand in the market where 100 equals equilibrium — now has a reading of 91 in 2015, its lowest level since the recession-ravaged year of 2009.

Impact on shippers: Highest uncertainty! News regarding alliances & consolidations will not be good for shippers as they will be facing changes in liner services owing to change in routing and schedules.
Fewer players would also lead to higher freight rates in the long term.
Impact on jobs:                 Maersk Line  which is the largest container shipping line has had a lower profit of $264 million (60% less) in the third quarter.
Shipping majors like Maersk Line would eliminate 4000 shore based jobs  by 2017
Impact on networks: We can expect shipping lines to postpone or cancel orders for new ships & also look at idling of existing ships / blank voyages .
 
To summarize :  Consolidation has been a slow and gradual process within the container shipping industry with various mergers and acquisitions and also strategic alliances.
The top 5 carriers in terms of deployed capacity control 47 percent of industry capacity in 2016 versus 41 percent in 2010, Source: Alphaliner, JOC.COM



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