MSI: Brexit to Hit Container Shipping Recovery Prospects

The UK Brexit vote will have far-reaching effects on the container shipping market, despite the country’s relatively minor role in global trades, according to Maritime Strategies International (MSI).

An analysis of the impact of the UK Brexit vote on the container shipping sector found that amid the short term political and economic uncertainty, the downside risks for container shipping have been extended beyond 2016 and into 2017 as the risk of recession grows.

The impact of reduced UK economic growth as a result of Brexit will be slight for container shipping, as the UK market only represents around 5 million TEU out of a global total of 185 million TEU. However, there are three ways in which Brexit could have a far greater impact, MSI said.

“The first is on a wider European project in which policymakers are far more reluctant to impose structural reforms on recalcitrant countries. Furthermore, given that populism seems to be the new order of the day, further measures to liberalise or encourage trade look increasingly imperilled,” MSI added.

Secondly, there will almost certainly be a long-term impact not merely on sterling but also the euro itself, with the direction of travel likely to be downwards. This will have a significant impact for container shipping.

MSI believes that the negative growth seen on the Asia-Europe trade in 2015 was largely a function of inventory destocking which in turn reflected the significant falls in the euro seen that year.

“Prior to the Brexit vote, we had believed that the stabilisation of the euro would lead to significant inventory restocking in 2016, which in turn would push up Asia-Europe westbound trade growth to over 7% year-on-year in the second half of 2016. This rapid Asia-Europe trade growth, and its knock-on impact on intra-Asian cargoes, is integral to our projections of the rapid elimination of idle capacity – or at least its reduction to below 500,000 TEU which is the level at which we believe some pricing power shifts back to the owners,” James Frew, Senior Analyst, MSI said.

If the euro weakens further, Frew believes it is reasonable to expect a protraction of the high amounts of idle capacity and as a consequence a deferral of any meaningful market improvement to 2017.

The third element is the impact on sentiment both in Europe and globally. If recessionary fears filter into the real economy, shipping will be one of the casualties – a highly plausible scenario given the extent to which markets are skittish and economies weak, according to MSI.

“Taken in isolation Britain’s decision to leave the EU is not going to sideswipe the shipping markets. However, the possible knock-on effects are potentially severe,” MSI said.