The spot rate for shipping goods in a 40-foot
container from Asia to northern Europe now tops $4,000, a 173% jump from just
before the diversions started in mid-December, Freightos.com, a cargo booking
and payment platform, said late Wednesday 3 Jan.
The cost for goods from Asia to the Mediterranean
increased to $5,175, Freightos said, adding that some carriers have announced
prices above $6,000 for this route starting in mid-January. Rates from Asia to North America’s East Coast have risen 55% to $3,900
for a 40-foot container.Shipping lines raise their prices when capacity is
stretched, and add surcharges for the extra time it takes to deliver the goods
and during busier-than-normal periods of the year.
The IMF called the
Red Sea a “systemically important†shipping lane that handles more than 19,000
vessel transits a year. Reduced traffic has been
observed since Dec. 16, the Washington-based institution said in the note.
For cargo owners seeing their freight costs rise, the
risk is that spot rates will stay elevated and leave them with less leverage
when they’re negotiating long-term contracts, which typically takes place
between March and May. Most ocean freight moves on rates set in these
contracts.
The impact goes
beyond the container sector.Oil tanker markets
have also seen some gains, shipbroker Braemar wrote in a research report,
mostly for vessels hauling refined fuels like gasoline and diesel. Earnings for
ships hauling refined fuels from the Mediterranean to Japan via the canal have
climbed from about $8,000 a day in early December, to $26,000 this week.
“Any route
involving the Red Sea is red hot,†the Braemar analysts said.