Xeneta reports in its Weekly Ocean Container-Shipping Market Update (20 Nov 2025) that the ocean freight market is seeing diverging trends across major trade lanes.
Market Snapshot & Capacity Trends
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Spot rates (as of 20 Nov) show:
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Far East → US West Coast: US$ 2,190 / FEU
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Far East → US East Coast: US$ 2,838 / FEU
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Far East → North Europe: US$ 2,367 / FEU
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Far East → Mediterranean: US$ 2,943 / FEU
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North Europe → US East Coast: US$ 1,570 / FEU
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Offered capacity (4-week rolling average, week of 17 Nov):
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Far East → US West Coast: +5.4% week-on-week
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Far East → US East Coast: +11.4%
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Far East → North Europe: +4.8%
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Far East → Mediterranean: +8.7%
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North Europe → US East Coast: +10.7%
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Notably, carriers are increasing capacity across all five major trade lanes for the second week in a row.
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The biggest capacity jump is on Far East → US East Coast, driven by double sailings: Ocean Alliance’s Ever Focus (from Busan) and Texas Triumph (from Ningbo-Zhoushan) are both calling Savannah, Georgia just before Christmas after transiting the Panama Canal.
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On the North Europe → US East Coast trade, offered capacity has surged to a 28-month high, nearing 60,000 TEU (4-week average). That represents a 55.5% increase compared to just a month ago, with a strong contribution from non-alliance carriers (up 157.1%) and the Gemini Alliance (up 42.3%). xeneta.com
Rate Movements & Demand Dynamics
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Far East → US East Coast: Capacity appears to be outpacing demand — as spot rates have dropped 2.8% week-on-week and are 23% below the 1 Nov peak.
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Far East → US West Coast: Rates dropped 3.2% this week — continuing a downward trend for the second week in a row.
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Far East → Europe (North Europe & Mediterranean): Contrary to the U.S.-bound trades, average spot rates are rising — up 5.6% into North Europe and 4.1% into the Mediterranean.
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Because capacity is also increasing on these European trades, Xeneta interprets the trend as a sign of strong demand into Europe.
Analyst Insight (Peter Sand, Xeneta)
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Peter Sand, Chief Analyst at Xeneta, notes “striking differences” between shipping dynamics into Europe versus the U.S.
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He argues that healthy demand in Europe is helping support rising rates, even as capacity increases.
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In contrast, for U.S.-bound trades, he suggests that excess capacity may be outstripping demand, causing the recent rate declines.
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Looking ahead to 2026, Sand expects these divergent patterns to continue:
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Demand into Europe could be fueled by more Chinese exports shifting away from North America.
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Meanwhile, U.S.-bound volumes may face headwinds from trade policy, which could dampen ocean container demand and impact consumer imports.
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Source: Xeneta





















