HomeNewsOpinionMarch madness is coming for the global shipping industry

March madness is coming for the global shipping industry

March is the traditional low season for the global logistics industry and also the time when ship operators, importers and freight forwarders sit down to discuss long-term contracts. With multiple international crises including wars and economic uncertainty, companies are having a tough time deciding how much long-term capacity and revenue targets to lock in

March 13, 2024 / 10:27 IST
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The Israel-Hamas war has spilled out into the Red Sea as Houthi rebels, supported by Iran, create terror and uncertainty for one of the world’s busiest shipping routes. (Source: Bloomberg)

March is the traditional low season for the global logistics industry after the Christmas shopping period passes and Lunar New Year shutdowns in January and February result in fewer goods coming out of factories in Asia. It’s also the time when ship operators, importers and freight forwarders sit down to discuss long-term contracts.

At the best of times this is an intricate dance between multiple stakeholders with billions of dollars in revenue, inventory and infrastructure on the line. Negotiating these deals is a massive exercise in game theory. Each party is trying to assess their own needs while guessing what their counterpart has to offer.

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In 2024, the process could be even more complex than at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic when demand soared and logistics got snarled by shutdowns. We can think of the swing factors affecting shipping supply and demand as divided into anticipated and unanticipated variables. In the first category there are risks that the industry has always known exist, even if their timing or severity cannot be well forecast: inclement weather, crop yields, fluctuating oil prices and recessions. The unknown unknowns include war, pandemics, embargoes and sudden financial crises.

The years 2020 and 2021 in particular were tough. No one saw the pandemic coming, and we certainly didn’t know how long it would last. Yet, it was one massive variable that could be easily tracked as governments opened and shut borders, while trade data — including forward-looking export orders — gave some clarity to a murky situation.