Supply-Chain Contagion Arrives - "Global Trade" Roiled, Cargo-Owners Panic In Wake Of Hanjin Bankruptcy
1
September, 2016
When
we reported
on the stunning collapse of South Korea's
Hanjin Shipping, the country's largest shipping firm and the world's
seventh-biggest container carrier, which earlier today was granted
court receivership after losing the support of its banks, we
speculated that "the global implications from the bankruptcy are
unknown: if, as expected, the company's ships remain "frozen"
and inaccessible for weeks if not months, the impact on global supply
chains will be devastating, potentially resulting in a cascading
waterfall effect, whose impact on global economies could be severe as
a result of the worldwide logistics chaos."
We
did not have long to wait for the aftershocks to emerge. As we first
reported last night, just hours after the insolvency news hit the
tape, three
Hanjin ships promptly found themselves stranded off
the California coast, stuck - together with the hundreds of tons of
cargo - in legal and financial limbo.
That
was just the beginning and as Reuters
updates this
morning, more Hanjin vessels have been seized at Chinese
ports, "further
roiling the industry as freight rates jump and manufacturers scramble
for alternatives."
The
Korea International Trade Association said on Thursday that about 10
Hanjin vessels in China have been either seized or were expected to
seized by charterers, port authorities or other parties. That adds to
one other ship seized in Singapore by a creditor earlier this week.
After
Hanjin's banks decided to end financial support for the shipper,
which immediately catalyzed its insolvency proceedings, many of its
vessels have either been denied entry to ports or unable to dock as
container lashing providers worry that they will not be paid. This
includes the port of Busan, South Korea's largest.
Seeking
to contain the fallout, a South Korean court said it would soon begin
proceedings to rehabilitate the carrier - which would allow Hanjin to
take legal action in other countries to keep its ships and other
assets from being seized. So far it appears to have failed, as
reports of "frozen", and stranded container carriers emerge
by the hour. Furthermore the task is moot: the court's move to
rehabilitate the world's seventh-largest container shipper is seen as
mainly procedural, and an eventual liquidation of assets is most
likely.
"Unlike
dry cargo, liner shipping is all about marketing and service
reliability - we haven't seen any large carriers come back from
collapse," said Rahul Kapoor, a director at maritime consultancy
Drewry Financial Research Services. "There is a loss of faith
among customers. It's very unlikely Hanjin can come back from the
ashes."
Realizing
a major global trade vacuum has opened up, rivals such as Hyundai
Merchant Marine announced they would deploy at least 13 of its ships
to two routes exclusively serviced by Hanjin, while the South Korean
government also plans to reach out to overseas carriers for help.
However,
a lengthy period of time will pass before the Hanjin void is filled.
In the meantime, freight rates routes where Hanjin operates have
surged. The
cost of shipping a 40-foot container on the Busan-Los Angeles route
has jumped about 55 percent, from $1,100 to around $1,700, according
to South Korea-based freight forwarder Pantos Logistics. Rates
between South Korea and the U.S. east coast via Panama have risen
about 50 percent to $2,400, it dded.
The
most direct impact of this price surge will be borne by South Korean
exporters: state-run think tank Korea Maritime Institute estimated
that shipping rates on Busan to U.S. routes would rise 27% and Busan
to Europe routes would rise 47% in the near term, causing Korean
exporters additional shipping costs of about 440.7 billion won per
year.
For
South Korea, where approximately 50% of GDP is in the form of net
exports, the hit would be substantial.
Soaring
transportation costs are just the start, as South Korean
conglomerates are now scrambling to find alternatives. LG
Electronics, the world's No.2 maker of TVs, told Reuters it was
cancelling orders with Hanjin and was seeking alternatives to ship
its freight. It
is also making contingency plans for cargo already on board Hanjin
ships in the event the vessels are seized.
But,
the most troubling outcome is that, as we predicted yesterday, "the
impact on global supply chains will be devastating, potentially
resulting in a cascading waterfall effect." This is already
manifesting itself in the quietly creeping chaos that has gripped the
global logistics industry, as operators realize what has happened.
South
Korea's maritime ministry said on Wednesday that Hanjin's woes
would affect
cargo exports for two or three months, with about 540,000 TEU of
cargo already loaded on Hanjin vessels and facing delays.
Unfortunately, in a "just in time" delivery world, 2-3
months of cargo delays will result in havoc, as countless tolling,
and intermediary operations suddenly find themselves without critical
components to engage in production, bottlenecking overall production
indefinitely.
As
expected, Reuters says the Korea
International Freight Forwarders Association said it has been
inundated with calls from cargo owners worried about the fate of
their shipments in transit to the United States and Europe. Since
many of the ships have been seized and are now in legal limbo, nobody
can provide an update. And while mobile phones and
semiconductors are carried by air, other electronics like home
appliances are shipped by sea.
Finally,
putting the bankruptcy in context, according to Alphaliner, Hanjin
accounts for 7% of Far East-North America container trade, or, in
dollar terms, hundreds of billions of dollars. According
to its website, Hanjin
served 60 routes in 35 countries,
connecting more than 90 major ports and 6,000 destinations around the
globe. The company's complete route atlas can be found
here.
"This
will have an impact on the entire industry," said
Cho Kyung-kyu, a director at the Freight Forwarders association.
Judging by the panicked response by cargo owners, the impact has
already arrived, now the only questions are i) how to quantify it,
and ii) how long until corporations and economists use the
supply-chain logjam as a scapegoat to justify the "unexpected"
swoon in Q3 economic and profitability metrics.
Hanjin pulls out of New Zealand service
Friday
09 October 2015
HANJIN
Shipping will withdraw from the Southeast Asia-Australia-New Zealand
KIX service before year’s end and terminate its two-year
participation in the NZ market.The line has told Australian customers
that booking for trans-Tasman links via KIX (which Hanjin labels AAZ)
would cease from...
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