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LONG TERM CONTAINER FREIGHT RATES FROM US TO FAR EAST FALLS — NOW BACK IN LINE WITH SPOT MARKET
April 21, 2022

After months of long-term rates being significantly more expensive than short-term rates on the backhaul US to Far East trade, Xeneta said a fall in long-term rates at the start of the second quarter has brought the two back in line.


In mid-March, long-term rates were US$350 per FEU higher than the spot market for containers going from the US East Coast towards the Far East.

 

Since then, long-term rates have fallen by US$250 per FEU, while spot rates have stayed flat, bringing the premium for the long term over short-term rates down to US$90 per box.

 

Similarly, long-term rates for exports from the US West Coast to the Far East have fallen by US$370 per FEU since mid-March, while spot rates have remained flat, bringing the difference between long and short-term rates down to US$90 per box from US$600.

 

"In mid-April 2021, long and spot rates were equal for exports out of the US West Coast, whereas it was US$180 per FEU more expensive to export on the spot market out of the US East Coast compared to long term rates," the ocean and air freight rate benchmarking and market analytics platform said.

It added that since April 2021, spot rates have remained almost flat on both coasts (-4% from the East Coast and +3% from the West Coast). On the other hand, despite their recent drop, long-term rates are still higher than in mid-April 2021.

 

Long-term rates signed in the past three months from the US East Coast to the Far East are up 20% from a year ago, with rates from the West Coast up 10.5%, it further said.

"Since the start of the pandemic, US exports have performed very poorly compared to imports, with record numbers of empty containers being sent back to the Far East. Compared to the first two months of 2019, North American imports from the Far East are up by 31% in January and February this year, while exports to the Far East are down by 19%," Xeneta said.

Unlike imports, where volumes to the East Coast are growing, the Xeneta report further said that those to the West Coast are down year-on-year, both coasts are seeing falling exports, with the East Coast worst affected.

 

US West Coast exports to the Far East are down 2.5% in the first two months of this year compared to the same period in 2021, while East Coast exports are down by 19.7%, it said.

"The West Coast exports just under twice as many loaded containers to the Far East compared to the East Coast, with congestion and delays not leading US exporters to shift their coast of choice as has been happening with US importers," Xeneta said.

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