A good news for shippers with
potential for a drop in freight rates. The number of blank sailings is at the lowest we have
seen since the pandemic started three years ago. It is not perfect – the level
is not zero. But no one should expect zero blank sailings as a normal state of
affairs, according to a Sea-Intelligence release. Blank sailings in Asia North America west coast route was below ten per
cent in June
The conditions on the global container shipping markets
are continuing their path towards normalization. However, a normal container
shipping market is not the same as a container shipping market with no changes
or disruptions; there will always be operational disruptions, a portion of
which will be in the form of blank sailings.
Looking at the share of total weekly sailings being
blanked on the Asia-North America West Coast trade, one can see that at its
worst (and disregarding the peaks), one in every four sailings was being
cancelled. This clearly improved during 2023 and went below 10 per cent in
June. But one also sees a slight uptick
again, as we approach early July – likely a reflection of the carriers wanting
to bring the spot rate decline under control.
However, at the Asia-North America West Coast trade in
conjunction with the other Transpacific and the two Asia-Europe trades , one
sees an underlying trend where the trends on each trade more-or-less move in an
identical fashion. There are a few deviations, however, especially for
Asia-North America West Coast. While the earlier deviation from 2nd half of
2021 can be explained by the severity of the bottlenecks and vessel queues
outside the West Coast ports, no such explanatory model fits the deviation that
we see in early 2023.
That said, shippers operating in the market now should
take the current state of affairs as being very normal indeed. This is as good
as it gets, the release added.