Figures reflect sharp decline in carriers’ Ebit in Q1

by | 12 Jun 2023 | International News

The dramatic decline in shipping lines’ earnings before interest and taxes (Ebit) in Q1 reflects the fast-normalising trade pattern of the past few months.

And while there were indications of a weakness in the market in the second half of 2022, which has manifested fully in 2023-Q1, revenues declined quite sharply, in the range of 35%-70% year-on-year (y-o-y).

That’s according to research by maritime consultants Sea-Intelligence which has revealed a stark difference for 2023-Q1 versus the previous two years.

Overall, 2023-Q1 Ebit was $7.00 billion versus a staggering $43.93bn in 2022-Q1, and even lower than the $16.28bn Ebit of 2021-Q1.

“That said, it is still markedly higher than the $621 million Ebit of 2019-Q1,” says CEO Alan Murphy. “In fact, the combined Ebit drop y-o-y was a staggering -81.0% across the same set of carriers.”

This can also be seen in the Ebit/TEU figures, Murphy points out, where none of the shipping lines was able to sustain its 2022-Q1 figures into 2023.

On average, the shipping lines recorded Ebit/TEU of 330 USD/TEU in 2023-Q1, down 81% from 2022-Q1’s average of 1 829 USD/TEU, but still vastly above the 53 USD/TEU average of 2010-2021. 

“The only silver lining, if you can even call it that, is that while y-o-y comparisons with 2022-Q1 will show a horrifying picture due to the unnaturally high numbers in that year, the reality is that the profitability of the shipping lines has increased considerably compared to the pre-pandemic levels, and looking at the current market indicators, it does not seem that the shipping lines are going to drop back down to those low levels in the short term.”

SOURCE: Figures reflect sharp decline in carriers’ Ebit in Q1 | Freight News

https://www.freightnews.co.za/