Linerlytica’s latest report,
issued on 13 March, stated that around 738,014 TEU of capacity, or 2.8% of the
fleet, is now idled, down from a peak of 3.8% in
February, as shipping lines are reactivating inactive vessels after the Chinese
New Year holidays.
MSC has widened
its gap against Maersk Line to 587,000 TEU, with the Swiss-Italian market
leader standing down at 68,000 TEU, compared with 298,000 TEU for Maersk.
MSC and Maersk
Line will disband their 2M alliance in February 2025, and the two carriers have
been pursuing different strategies since the Covid-19 pandemic pushed up
freight rates to historical peaks.
Linerlytica
observed, “OCEAN Alliance carriers have
the smallest number of ships idled, compared to 2M and THE Alliance, in a
clear sign that carriers are pursuing very different strategies in dealing with
the capacity surplus. Freight rates are still falling while charter rates are
holding their ground, in a further sign that carriers are intent on chasing market share despite the softening
freight market.”
MSC received the
world’s largest and second largest container ships last week, with the 24,346
TEU MSC Irina and 24,116 TEU MSC Tessa delivered in two straight days from
Yangzijiang Shipbuilding and Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding respectively. MSC
also took delivery of the fourth of eleven 15,000 TEU ships chartered from
Eastern Pacific Shipping; deliveries are expected by the end of this year.
The new ships have
upped MSC’s capacity to an all-time high of 738 ships of 4.77 million TEU,
broadening the gap with Maersk Line to 587,120 TEU.