China’s Biggest Shipowners See Market Slump Continuing for Years


China’s two biggest shipowners said a market slump may continue for at least two more years as more vessels enter service and the country’s economic growth slows.
“I fear the future two-to-three years will still remain in a downtrend,” Wei Jiafu, Chairman of China Ocean Shipping Group Co., said yesterday at a conference in Xiamen, China. “Many people don’t have confidence.”
Operators of vessels used to carry commodities, containers and oil are all contending with a glut and an economic slowdown that has sapped rates. The Baltic Dry Index (BDIY), a benchmark for commodities-shipment charges, has fallen 60 percent in the past year, while container lines are cutting Asia-Europe sailings because of a demand slump.
“In the coming two years, it’s unlikely that the world shipping sector will bottom out,” said Xu Lirong, general manager of China Shipping Group Co., the country’s No. 2 shipping group. Companies should increase cooperation to help ease the slump, he said.
China Shipping’s listed units China Shipping Container Lines Co. and China Shipping Development Co. (1138) both had losses in the first half. The container-shipping company has fallen 7.9 percent this year in Hong Kong trading, while tanker arm Development has tumbled 31 percent.
Cosco Group’s main unit China Cosco Holdings Co. (1919) fell 4 percent to close at HK$3.12 in Hong Kong yesterday. It’s dropped 18 percent this year.
The unit lost 4.87 billion yuan ($773 million) in the six months ended June, its third half-year loss in a row. Wei, who’s the unit’s chairman and chief executive officer, has pledged to waive his salary until the losses end.

Cosco Treasure

Cosco may follow A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S (MAERSKB), the world’s largest container-ship operator, by investing in areas outside of shipping, Wei said at the conference. The group is looking for “treasure” that would complement its sea-cargo businesses and strengthen the company, he said. An oil division has previously helped Maersk withstand losses at its container- shipping arm, he said.
Container lines have combined operations on Asia-Europe routes after price wars caused industrywide losses. Still, rates have fallen close to unprofitable levels because of demand slump. Shipments plunge 13 percent from a year earlier in July, according to Kuehne & Nagel International AG, the world’s biggest organizer of sea-cargo shipments.
Trans-pacific routes have avoided the worst of the slump because of economic growth in the U.S. and a housing market rebound. Mediterranean Shipping Co. has this month deployed a 13,800-container vessel on a U.S. route. It will be the largest ship to serve a port in the country.



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