Jun

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In the first quarter of 2023, container output contracted by 71% compared to the previous year, with only 306,000 TEUs produced, marking the lowest level since 2010. Drewry estimates that full-year production will not exceed 1.8 million TEUs, the lowest since the recession-hit year of 2009.

Container Production Slumps to Lowest Level in 14 Years, Says Drewry

Henry Gifford writes:

What sort of time lag can be expected between ordering the containers and their actual use? I order cardboard boxes, and they are used to ship goods a few weeks later, I expect a shorter time lag for larger cardboard box users. But I expect it takes time to ramp up steel container production and delivery.

Stefan Jovanovich responds:

Top 10 Shipping Container Manufacturers In USA

Steve Ellison adds:

Maybe the shipping container industry does not have just in time inventory replenishment, or maybe it did, but the policies did not survive the covid pandemic. In a previous career in supply chain management, I needed to be aware of how inventory and decision lags downstream in the supply chain amplified demand fluctuations upstream, on manufacturers for example. This is known as the bullwhip effect.

Pamela Van Giessen comments:

There was an article in the WSJ earlier this year/late last year (the months seem to fly by) that shipping has fallen off a cliff. Part due to less goods needed/wanted, overstock because of covid era over ordering, and backlogs having caught up. Could it be there is an oversupply of containers based on things normalizing and/or a temp decrease while everything catches up?

I have been interested in knowing what the rail freight looks like but haven’t been able to find a source that provides that info (also haven’t looked that hard). Living in a rail town, it was much definitely quieter 6 mos ago than it has been lately. But maybe it’s just more coal out of the Powder River basin for China, India, etc. At least 3 long trains of coal/day. Every time I hear the environmentalists cry about CO2 emissions and how we have to get rid of xyz in the US, I have to laugh at the latest pet peeve (gas stoves & furnaces, increasing energy efficiency in dishwashers, wash machines, etc), it will never make a dent against all that coal being fired up in other parts of the world.

Jeff Watson offers:

Baltic Exchange Dry Index

Stefan Jovanovich adds:

Container Shipping Industry Faces Unprecedented Slump in Long-Term Rates

The container shipping industry experienced a significant downturn in global long-term freight rates during the month of May, as the contracted cost of shipping containers plummeted by a staggering 27.5%, according to Xeneta’s Shipping Index (XSI®). This marks the ninth consecutive month of rate drops and represents the largest monthly fall ever recorded on the platform.


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