In the final quarter of 2023, contracts of more than
six months’ length accounted for 45% of all agreements, up five percentage
points from the third quarter, according to Xeneta data. Six-month contracts accounted for 28% of the market, while contracts
of one month or less made up just 14%.
“There’s still a lot of friction in the global supply
chain market and that means there will be opportunities for some sectors,â€
explained chief airfreight officer Niall van de Wouw.“If big ocean carriers are
not going through the Red Sea, it might delay a million or more containers,
with all the knock-on effects. And the fact that you don’t know how long this situation will continue means some
shippers will pay for the predictability of air cargo to lessen the impact of
the ocean freight disruption.“In contrast, air cargo seems to be in a more
‘steady state’. It is important for airlines and forwarders to focus on the
elements they can control, such as cost and reliability, and to be ready for
when the opportunities arrive.â€
But shippers are facing cost rises, whether by sea or
if they must shift to air.
“The timing of the
whole crisis could not be worse, with a two-week
global slowdown and pause in working over Christmas and new year – what will
the reaction be when shippers return this week and reality and additional costs
become transparent?†asked one forwarder.
With increased transit times for shipping of between
10 and 25 days, as lines avoid the Red Sea, sea-air via Singapore, Dubai and
Sri Lanka is expected to rise.
“Operationally and cost-wise, it carries benefit in
the current market and will do in two to three weeks’ time when the impact
really begins to get felt,†said the forwarder.
“The skill is predicting what will unwind now the
world has revived itself after the holidays and reality is filtering down.â€
But he warned: “Think
of the effect on inflation and on the cost of goods.â€