With the continued gradual improvement in schedule
reliability in August 2022 and the resultant improvement in vessel delays, the
global fleet that was unavailable due to these delays dropped to 7.9%.
This was from a peak of 13.8% in January 2022. Keeping in mind the baseline
unavailable capacity of 2% (as there are always some delays), at the height of
delays in January 2022, an additional 11.8% of capacity was being absorbed.
Since that level is down to 5.9% additional capacity in August 2022, this
essentially means that the congestion issues have been cut in half, compared to
the situation in January 2022, as per a Sea-Intelligence analysis.
The significant injection of released capacity has
led to a situation where the physical
shortage of capacity, which drove the freight rates up, is no longer an issue
in most trades. The question is then, how long will it take for this
gradual improvement to get to a point where the market is fully back to normal?
There are multiple different way to look at this.
The first way is to look at the pace of worsening
in 2020-2021, and the pace of improvement in 2022. The rate of change for both
is quite similar, which means that, using this methodology, a full reversal to
normality should come in March 2023. The second way is to compare the current
rate of improvement, with the improvement after the congestion problems in
2015. While the rate of improvement in 2022 is faster, it is also starting from
a higher level, putting a recovery also by March 2023.
The third way is to normalise the developments in 2015 and
2022 down to the same baseline and create an absorption index equalling 100
points at the respective peaks. In this case, one can see that in relative
terms, the pace of improvement in 2022 is less than in 2015, but the indication
is also that the current situation will come down to meet the 2015 developments
by January 2023. In summary, all three
models suggest we should be back at the “normal” 2% capacity loss baseline by
early 2023, assuming the current pace continues and there are no new major
supply chain disruptions, the release said.