Depots Face
Brunt Of Container Surplus Into Next Year
November
15, 2022
The
industry is witnessing a major slump in the order-to-inventory ratio with high
inventories but slower demands. According to the November edition of the
Container xChange Forecaster, this leaves a rippling effect across different
stages of container logistics.
One of the glaring issues which will impact container repositioning and
container movement well into the year 2023 is insufficient depot space.
“There is just not enough depot space to accommodate all the containers. With
the further release of container inventory into the market (e.g., from the
disposal of leasing fleets), there will be added pressure on depots in the
coming months. This will be a key challenge for some and a competitive advantage
for others in the business, especially in China because of the empty container
repositioning there”, inferred Christian Roeloffs, cofounder and CEO, of
Container xChange, the online container logistics platform.
Talking about the impact of hinterland disruptions and de-fleeting of shipping
lines in the coming times, Andrea Monti, CEO at Sogese who also owns container
depots in different locations in Europe commented during the Digital Container
Summit in October, “Whatever was coming in and out of, for instance, our Milan
depot is quite stuck. And the container volume at the depots is increasing to an
extent that we are returning some requests for depot service agreements. We are
in a situation where we are not able to accept new clients for some locations.”
This peak season, which has technically not happened this year, retailers and
companies are more cautious in their stock management strategy as they adjust to
the shorter cargo delivery cycle.
“There is enough inventory with retailers. Once these inventories exhaust in
North America and Europe, companies will order again, and demand for shipping
capacity will pop back up. This won’t go back to max pandemic levels but
certainly, be back to the long-term average upward trend. What has happened now
is that the cargo is “on time” again and hence you’ll see a slowdown in new
ordering as companies adjust to this more efficient turnaround times in ocean
freight delivery.”
“For container owners, this could potentially mean a rise in container storage
fee by depots as more containers pile up to disincentivise longer staying
containers at the depots,” said Dr. Johannes Schlingmeier, cofounder and CEO, of
Container xChange.
The latest monthly logistics report by Container xChange ‘Where are all the
containers’ echoed interesting testimonies on the market situation.
The average container prices (for trading) and one-way pickup charges (for
leasing) for standard containers declined to their lowest in two years in China.
These were at $3711 in October in China, declining further (so far) in November.

CAx (Container availability Index) * values are much higher than pre-pandemic –
meaning that the inbound containers are significantly higher at the Chinese
ports than the imported boxes this year as compared to 2019 (pre-pandemic) and
since then.
One-way pickup charges for standard containers from China to North America are
declining month on month since May 2022 from $1773 to $344 in October.
(One-fifth of what it was in May)

One-way pickup charges from China to Europe declined from $2845 in January 2022
to $1726 in May 2022 and further to $910 in October

One-way pickup charges declined by 80% from $1773 in May to $344 in October over
the past 6 months at the China-North America stretch and a 47% decline on the
China-to-Europe stretch
“The declining rates and container prices indicate a weakening demand and
surplus of containers. The wider this gap, the lower the container rates and
prices. The logistic companies have already moved onto the planning for Chinese
New Year because of the weak peak season this year”, further added Roeloffs.
Average container prices fell by 9% from $3609 in September to $3286 in October
in the US

Average prices declining in Europe

Average prices freefall in Asia

Rising imbalances in supply and demand for containers, rising empty container
repositioning to Asia and tighter depot space will be topics for attention well
into the year 2023.
A majority of those polled by Container xChange in the month of October echo
that the freefall of container prices is NOT an indicator of global economic
normalisation well into 2023. Clearly, the industry is not upbeat about the
supply chain getting back on track.
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