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Shanghai Containerised Freight Index takes biggest loss

Sep 15, 2010 Shipping

THE Shanghai Containerised Freight Index (SCFI) shed 10.65 per cent of its value in the last two months and posted its biggest-ever weekly loss last week when freight rates plunged to all main export destinations except Australia.


Based on Paris-based Alphaliner's calculations, weekly capacity on the Far East-US routes has increased 27 per cent since January while the Far East-Europe routes have experienced a 22 per cent increase.


The index ended last week at 1,413 points, down 37 points from a week earlier. The index has been falling steadily since the beginning of July when it reached a high of 1,583 points.


Spot rates from Shanghai to the US west coast fell US$68 per FEU last week while rates to north Europe fell by $80 per cent FEU. Carriers are reporting falling vessel utilisation levels as the impact of recent capacity introductions and a weaker than expected peak season are beginning to affect load factors.


Hardest hit were spot rates to Singapore, which fell 15 per cent last week from $367 per TEU to $320 per TEU as declining utilisation in long haul sectors began to spill over into transshipment feeder trades.


Rates to the Middle East have fallen since July, having dropped $370 per TEU in the last two months and falling by $46 per cent TEU in the last week alone.


Only Shanghai-Australia increased in the last two weeks, but was largely due to a raft of recent rate increases on a trade lane, which had suffered from a bout of over-capacity, prompting rates to fall 50 per cent since January. Given that, rates to Australia have risen by $185 per TEU in the last two weeks but are still down 36 per cent on the mid-January high.
(Source:www.schednet.com)

 
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