Global
Supply Chains
Paralyzed After World's 7th
Largest Container Shipper
Files Bankruptcy, Assets
Frozen
31
August, 2016
After
years of relentless decline in the Baltic Dry index...
...
today the largest casualty finally emerged on Wednesday when South
Korea's Hanjin Shipping, the country's largest shipping firm and the
world's seventh-biggest container carrier, filed for court
receivership after losing the support of its banks, leaving its
assets frozen as ports from China to Spain denied access to its
vessels.
Hanjin Shipping is Korea's largest and one of the world’s top ten container carriers that operates some 70 liner and tramper services around the globe transporting over 100 million tons of cargo annually. Its fleet consists of some 150 containerships and bulk carriers.
With 4 regional headquarters in the U.S., Europe, Asia and South East & West Asia, approximately 5,000 global staffs as well as container terminals in world’s major ports contribute to Hanjin Shipping’s world-class logistics network around the world.
As Reuters reports, banks led by state-run Korea Development Bank withdrew backing for the world's seventh-largest container carrier on Tuesday, saying a funding plan by its parent group was inadequate to tackle debt that stood at 5.6 trillion won ($5 billion) at the end of 2015.
Suk
Tai-soo, president and chief executive officer of Hanjin Shipping Co,
arrives
at a court in Seoul, South Korea, August 31, 2016.
South
Korea's biggest shipping firm, announced the filing for receivership
and a request to the court to freeze its assets, which the Seoul
Central District Court planned to grant, a judge told Reuters.
As
part of the company's insolvency process, the court will now decide
whether Hanjin Shipping should remain as a going concern or be
dissolved, a process that usually takes one or two months but is
expected to be accelerated in Hanjin's case, the judge said. A
bankruptcy for Hanjin Shipping would be the largest ever for a
container shipper in terms of capacity, according to consultancy
Alphaliner, exceeding the 1986 collapse of United States Lines.
Coming
as no surprise to anyone who has followed the persistent decline in
worldside trade, global shipping firms have been swamped by
overcapacity and sluggish demand, with Hanjin booking a net loss of
473 billion won in the first half of the year.
South
Korea's ailing shipbuilders and shipping firms, which for decades
were engines of its export-driven economy, are in the midst of a
wrenching restructuring. According to Reuters, KDB's decision to stop
backing Hanjin Shipping shows the government is taking a tougher
stance with troubled corporate groups.
The
fallout from the country's unprecedented bankruptcy invoked a
statement from South Korea's Finance Minister Yoo Il-ho, who said
that "the government will swiftly push forth corporate
restructuring following the rule that companies must figure out how
to survive and find competitiveness on their own while taking
responsibility."
To
be sure, this decision is a fresh breath of air in a world in which
mega-corprations across the globe have become "too big to fail"
by default, and in many cases anticipate a government bail-out.
According
to South Korea's Financial Services Commission, Hyundai Merchant
Marine, the country's second-largest shipping line, will look to
acquire its rival's healthy assets, including profit-making vessels,
overseas business networks and key personnel, A Hyundai
Merchant Marine spokesman told Reuters nothing had been decided about
the potential acquisition of Hanjin assets and that the firm will
hold talks with KDB. Hyundai Merchant Marine is also in the process
of a voluntary debt restructuring.
The
question now is whether as a result of the bankruptcy process there
will be an unexpected failure in the global supply-chain:South
Korea's oceans ministry estimates a two- to three-month delay in the
shipping of some Korean goods that were to be transported by Hanjin
Shipping, and plans to announce in September cargo-handling
measures which could include Hyundai Merchant Marine taking over some
routes, a ministry spokesman said on Wednesday.
Making
matters worse, Reuters adds that KDB's move to pull the plug was
already having an impact on Hanjin's operations, with the
company's various shipping assets already frozen. Ports
including those in Shanghai and Xiamen in China, Valencia, Spain, and
Savannah in the U.S. state of Georgia had blocked access to Hanjin
ships on concerns they would not be able to pay fees, a company
spokeswoman told Reuters.
Another
vessel, the Hanjin Rome, was seized in Singapore late on Monday by a
creditor, according to court information. "Now Hanjin must
do everything it can to protect its clients' cargoes and make sure
they are not delayed to their destination, by filing injunctions to
block seizures in all the countries where its ships are
located," said Bongiee Joh, managing director of the Korea
Shipowners' Association.
Finally,
while jarring Hanjin's bankrtupcy was inevitable: shipping industry
economics have deteriorated. Charter rates for medium-sized container
ships have dropped from around $26,000 a day in 2010 to $13,000 per
day now.
Container rates from Shanghai to the U.S west coast
have more than halved since then, from around $2,000 per 40-foot
container in January 2010 to $596 per 40-foot box last week, data
from the Shanghai Shipping Exchange shows.
Shares
in Hanjin Shipping have been suspended after plunging 24% on Tuesday.
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. The good news is that both economists and
corporations around the globe, both those impacted and others, will
now have yet another excuse on which to blame the "unexpected"
slowdown in both profits and economic growth in the third quarter.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.