Why Are Shipping Rates Surging? 31% Spike in a Week with More Hikes Expected!
Publish Time: 2025-05-20 Origin: Site
Freight Rates Rocket as U.S. Importers Scramble to Ship
U.S. importers are racing to move Chinese goods before the 90-day tariff suspension expires, injecting sudden momentum into global shipping.
Spot Rates Skyrocket
Shanghai → Los Angeles: Up 16% to $3,136/FEU (40-foot container).
Shanghai → New York: Jumped 19% to $4,350/FEU (Drewry’s WCI Index).
Next week’s forecasts (Shanghai Containerized Freight Index):
West Coast U.S.: Further 31% weekly surge.
East Coast U.S.: 22% increase.
Drewry warns of continued rate hikes due to acute capacity shortages on Pacific routes.
Diverging Trends: Europe Trade Lags
While the Trans-Pacific booms, Asia-Europe rates remain weak:
Shanghai → Rotterdam: Dropped 1% to $2,035/FEU.
Shanghai → Genoa: Fell 1% to $2,742/FEU.
Carriers Hike FAK Rates Effective June 1
CMA CGM:
Asia → North Europe: $3,300/FEU.
Asia → West Mediterranean: $4,400/FEU.
MSC: Asia → North Europe at $3,100/FEU (all-in).
Yang Ming:
North Europe: $3,200/FEU.
Mediterranean: $5,000/FEU.
Peak Season Risks: Congestion & Overheating
Citigroup: The tariff window’s August end coincides with peak season, potentially amplifying demand (China supplies 40% of U.S. container imports).
HSBC: A flood of shipments could trigger port bottlenecks, echoing pandemic-era gridlock.
Analysts’ Warnings: Short-Lived Boom?
Kepler Cheuvreux: Q2 earnings may not see “material upside” despite rate spikes. 2025 outlook remains weak due to potential:
Post-window tariff resumption.
Red Sea route normalization (reducing detour demand).
Deutsche Bank: Long-term overcapacity looms, though short-term restocking may buoy rates.