Some ocean shipping rates collapsing, but real price relief is months away

Spot market price to ship one container across the pacific has fallen 80 since September

Prices in the most volatile segment of ocean shipping are collapsing, but top retailers like Walmart and Home Depot should not expect relief until the spring contract renegotiation season, industry experts said.

Spot rates, which cover anywhere from 10% to 40% of ocean container shipments and are considered a key indicator of the industry's health, are in free fall as recession looms and the pandemic-fueled U.S. import bubble deflates.

The cost to send a container from Asia to the United States on the demand-sensitive spot market has tumbled more than 80% from its September peak above $20,000 for a 40-foot container, according to freight booking platform Freightos.

Stacked containers on ship and dockside

Stacked containers are shown as ships unload their cargo at the Port of Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California, U.S. November 22, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake (Reuters Photos)

Major carriers like Mediterranean Shipping Co (MSC) and A.P. Moller-Maersk also are expecting delivery of hundreds of new container ships, which amplifies risk as carriers already have more ships than they need to handle shrinking demand.

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Ticker Security Last Change Change %
WMT WALMART INC. 92.63 +0.13 +0.14%
HD THE HOME DEPOT INC. 426.96 -2.17 -0.51%
AMKBY A.P. MØLLER-MÆRSK A/S 8.63 +0.17 +2.01%

"There is sense of payback-time in the market after the COVID years, where carriers have been in absolute control," said Peter Sand, chief analyst at air and ocean freight rate benchmarking platform Xeneta.

Nonetheless, top customers like Walmart, Home Depot and Amazon.com will not necessarily dictate terms during contract talks that typically happen around May, experts said.

A ship stacked with containers

A container ship is shown at the Port of Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California, U.S. November 22, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake (Reuters Photos)

This is partly because shippers that move thousands of containers every year want predictable pricing.

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
AMZN AMAZON.COM INC. 210.71 +2.82 +1.36%

Big shippers "go into their buying season ... wanting to know what their freight is going to cost. They're not interested in playing the (spot) market" by shopping for lower rates, shipping expert John McCown said.

At the same time, Maersk and other carriers told investors they would continue to prop up rates by cancelling voyages to match shrinking demand. They are also scrapping small, old "rust buckets" to cut capacity.

That means shoppers will suffer from higher prices a bit longer, experts said.

"The American consumer should not be expecting that this is going to lead to massive price relief. That's just not going to happen," said Jason Miller, associate professor of supply chain management at Michigan State University.

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'BOTTOMING OUT'

Carriers raised rates and reaped record profits during the pandemic shipping surge due to a spike in demand for shipping services. Many carriers prioritized loads with higher spot rates and bumped containers from overbooked ships, leading to an increase in the use of the spot market.

However, this trend began to shift toward the end of last year due to a drop in the import of retail goods such as furniture, appliances, and apparel.

The chief executive of container shipping company Ocean Network Express, Jeremy Nixon, said in December that short-term spot rates were "bottoming out."

Port of Los Angeles

SAN PEDRO, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 19: Aerial view of containers and cargo ships at the Port of Los Angeles on January 19, 2022 in San Pedro, California.  ((Photo by Qian Weizhong/VCG via Getty Images) / Getty Images)

Meanwhile, long-term contract rates finished 2022 about 20% lower than the pandemic peak of more than $8,000 per container, according to maritime consultancy Drewry, which expects contract rates to halve in 2023. That forecast would put rates at about $3,200, versus the pre-pandemic rate of around $1,500.

Several factors could support longer-term contract rates, including upheaval from China's COVID outbreak, war in Ukraine, and high labor costs.

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Steve Schult, vice president for almond farming cooperative Blue Diamond Growers, bets contract rates will not revisit pre-COVID levels.

"It's kind of like inflation," he said. "It never really goes all the way back down."