9 Out of 20 Major Shipping Firms will Disappear by 2018

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The CEO of Hapag-Lloyd, the world’s fifth-largest container shipping company, expects consolidation in the sector to continue this year, further reducing the number of largest shipping firms as they merge their businesses.

The merger

Rolf Habben Jansen says that the consolidation drive will result in nine of the former 20 largest shipping companies active since five years is about to disappear by the end of 2018, Reuters reports.

Hapag-Lloyd, fresh from completing the integration of its business with UAE-based liner shipping company United Arab Shipping Company (UASC), expects to reap a major portion of the gains from the deal this year.

According to Jansen, the company could achieve 85 to 90 percent of targeted annual synergies of USD 435 million this year and 100 percent from 2019.

Furthermore, the company expects its full-year earnings for 2017 to be higher than previously announced.

The up trend for shippers

The year 2018 seems to be on the right track, as charter rates are on the rise besides lower size of the idle fleet. However, further pressure is expected from the new build container ship deliveries, set to join the global fleet this year.

The total boxship capacity set for delivery in 2018 is expected to reach 1.5 million TEU in 2018, according to the figures from Alphaliner. More than half of these deliveries will be made up of ULCVs ranging from 14,000 to 21,000 TEU.

Hence, Hapag-Lloyd’s CEO anticipates transport demand growth to reach 4.5 percent in 2018 and more than 4 percent in 2019.

Lloyd’s advantage

Since integration with UASC, Hapag-Lloyd had got a modern tonnage influx. This has made the company to refrain from new build orders, thereby dedicate its focus on bolstering its financial structure by cutting its debt.

In October 2017, the German liner company raised USD 414 million in gross proceeds from its capital increase scheme, which was agreed upon as part of the merger with UASC.

Hapag-Lloyd said it would use the proceeds primarily to pay back its debts as well as for general corporate purposes.

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Source: World Maritime News