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Shipping giant Maersk, considered a barometer for global trade, is not seeing signs of a U.S. recession as freight demand remains robust, the company's chief executive said Wednesday. "We've seen in the last couple of years, actually, [the shipping container] market remaining surprisingly resilient to all the fear of recessions that there has been," Vincent Clerc told CNBC's "Squawk Box Europe" Wednesday, adding that container demand was generally a good indicator of underlying macroeconomic strength. The last week has seen a sudden escalation in worries about a recession in the world's biggest economy, the U.S., following a set of weaker-than-expected jobs data which has divided economists and market participants. U.S. retail trade inventories — a measure of unwanted build — in May were up 5.33% from a year ago at $793.86 billion, according to the most recent release from the U.S. Census Bureau. A report released by leasing platform Container xChange on Wednesday said indicators suggest inventories are higher than demand, meaning a less "prosperous time" in the coming months for container traders, the logistics market and retailers who stockpiled.
Persons: We've, Vincent Clerc, CNBC's, Clerc Organizations: Shipping, Maersk, U.S . Census Locations: U.S
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewTesla's biggest competitor, BYD, just launched a big partnership with Uber. AdvertisementThe partnership also ups BYD's international visibility, as Uber passengers ride in cars they might not have otherwise tried out. AdvertisementThe Uber partnership may also mitigate a European Union tariff on Chinese EV makers. In late June, Volkswagen said it would invest up to $5 billion in US EV maker Rivian, which would develop software for both companies' cars.
Persons: , Uber, Matt Bryson, Bryson, giant's, Dara Khosrowshahi, BYD, Tesla, Tesla's robotaxis Organizations: Service, Business, Xchange Leasing, Lion City Rentals, Tesla, Western, Uber, Volkswagen, Rivian Locations: Europe, America, East, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Russia
[1/3] A general view shows Haifa Port, which is to be sold to India's Adani Ports and local partner Gadot in Haifa, Israel July 24, 2022. Ashdod port has imposed restrictions on the transport of hazardous materials which has meant slower transits. Around 13 ships - comprising cargo, container and dry bulk vessels - were currently moored inside Ashdod port, according to MarineTraffic data. "The Suez Canal, a critical waterway for various commercial vessels, including container ships, may face disruptions," Container xChange CEO Christian Roeloffs said. The Marshall Islands registry, one of the world's top shipping flags, last week raised the security level for Israel's ports and its territorial waters to their highest.
Persons: Gadot, Ilan Rosenberg, Christian Roeloffs, Jonathan Saul, Ari Rabinovitch, David Evans, Louise Heavens Organizations: Haifa Port, Adani, REUTERS, Rights, Israel's, Port, MSC, Ministry, Marshall, Thomson Locations: Haifa, Israel, Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod, Port, Port of Haifa, , Israel's, Suez, Hormuz, United States, Arabian, Strait, Gulf of Oman and Red, Jerusalem
CNN —Shipping containers from China are “piling up” in Russia amid a surge of Chinese goods flowing into the country as trade soars, a new analysis has found. Russia has an extra 150,000 shipping containers that importers are scrambling to return to China, logistics platform Container xChange said in a report released Thursday, citing information provided by a customer. “There is significant cargo movement from China into Russia but very scarce movement back to China from Russia. Containers are piling up in Russia which means that the secondhand container prices are very low in Russia,” CEO Christian Roeloffs said in the report. The type of goods exchanged is contributing to the surplus of shipping containers in Russia, according to Container xChange.
Persons: Christian Roeloffs, Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping Organizations: CNN — Shipping, xChange, Imports, Organization of, Petroleum, International Energy Agency Locations: China, Russia, Ukraine, United States, Moscow, West, Beijing, India, Asia
The Panama Canal has been hit by a serious drought this year, causing long transit times for ships. A shipper recently paid $2.4 million for a winning bid to jump the queue, according to one energy shipping firm. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe congestion in the Panama Canal is closely watched because 40% of US container traffic passes through the waterway, according to an August report from Container xChange, a logistics platform. The Panama Canal Authority said in a Tuesday statement that there's been an improvement in the queue of vessels waiting to transit the canal. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Panama Canal Authority and Avance Gas did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Insider sent outside regular business hours.
Persons: Oystein Kalleklev, Kalleklev, there's, project44 Organizations: Service, Gas, Shipping, Maersk, Wall, Panama Canal Authority, Bloomberg, Avance Locations: Panama, Wall, Silicon
Over 200 ships are currently stuck in a massive traffic jam in the Panama Canal. The US is the largest user of the Panama Canal, so the bottleneck could hit holiday shipping. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe world's worst traffic jam is at the Panama Canal, where hundreds of massive ships are stuck due to a serious drought that reduced water levels. The traffic jam is so bad that ships have paid multiple times the toll to pass through. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe US is also the largest user of the Panama Canal, accounting for 70% of the waterway's traffic, per Container xChange.
Persons: Lars Oestergaard Nielsen, Maersk's, Insider's Rebecca Cohen Organizations: Morning, Wall, Bloomberg, Clarksons Research Services, Reuters, Panama Canal Authority, Maersk Locations: Panama, Americas, project44, Gulf, East Coast
Climate XChange has run a Tesla raffle since 2015 and this year's prize is a $165,000 Model X. The last three years sold out, but in 2023 ticket sales are slow, the raffle's organizer told Insider. Some previous entrants have said they no longer want to win a Tesla thanks to Elon Musk. That's despite the top prize, a Tesla Model X Plaid and all associated taxes, being worth $250,000 — a 10% higher value than 2022's raffle. He has put down a deposit for a Rivian as a replacement, he told Insider.
Trends in global supply chains continue to flip as container prices fall and container depots fill up, logistics data show. Sasin Tipchai | 500Px | Getty ImagesWhile there was a shortage of containers at the height of the pandemic, the global economy is now facing the opposite problem: too many containers. It points to more signs of falling global demand and an impending economic slowdown. Turning away new clientsItalian container depot owner Sogese chief executive Andrea Monti told Container xChange his depots are full. watch nowMonti told Container xChange that the peak season of goods shipments — as Christmas looms — "technically did not happen this year."
After two years of port congestions and container shortages, disruptions are now easing as Chinese exports slow in light of waning demand from Western economies and softer global economic conditions, logistics data shows. Container freight rates, which soared to record prices at the height of the pandemic, have been falling rapidly and container shipments on routes between Asia and the U.S. have also plunged, data shows. "On the other hand, the congestion is easing with vessel waiting times reducing, ports operating at less capacity, and the container turnaround times decreasing which ultimately, frees up the capacity in the market." The latest Drewry composite World Container Index — a key benchmark for container prices — is $3,689 per 40-foot container. That's 64% lower than the same time last September after falling 32 weeks in a row, Drewry said in a recent update.
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