China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shipping and logistics firms anticipate huge gains from RCEP

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

The Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p agreement will be a strong growth driver for the shipping industry, logistics firms and major ports, industry experts said.

Participat­ing countries of the RCEP are the 10 member states of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, China, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand. They account for around 30 percent of the global population, global gross domestic product and global trade.

Zhang Jun, a transporta­tion analyst from Guosheng Securities, said that more than 90 percent of the China’s imports and exports are handled by the shipping sector, and the significan­t increase in trade between China and other RCEP members will stimulate Chinese shipbuildi­ng, shipping industries, as well as major Chinese ports whose main business is internatio­nal cargo.

Shen Xiaofeng, an analyst who specialize­s in the transporta­tion sector at Huatai Securities, expects the maritime transporta­tion sector to directly benefit from the rising cargo volume under the RCEP agreement.

“We expect the RCEP to represent a new growth wave for ports and the shipping sector as a whole,” said Shen.

According to Shen, coastal ports in China saw a compound annual growth rate of 20 percent between 2001 and 2007, and the rate slowed down to about 7 percent between 2010 and 2016 after the 2008 global financial crisis.

The RCEP will make the Asian supply chain more interconne­cted and enable efficient product sales, said Eric Lin, managing director and head of research at UBS Securities Co Ltd.

Chen Zhuo, a senior analyst with

China Merchants Securities, said the RCEP has bucked the anti-globalizat­ion trend of the past few years and is the latest effort in restoring global free trade.

Wang Jingtian, an analyst specializi­ng in transporta­tion with China Galaxy Securities, said the 15 RCEP countries have a combined population of 2.27 billion, GDP of $26 trillion and exports of nearly $5.2 trillion. Equivalent to about onethird of the global economy, the massive economic scale of the RCEP will help China as it embarks on a dual-circulatio­n developmen­t pattern, he said.

Since the RCEP covers various industries like cargo, services and investment, it will greatly enhance the overall free trade efforts within the region, said Wang.

The RCEP not only bodes well for the shipping sector, but also gives a boost to a freer flow of people traveling across the region, said Chen from China Merchants Securities. “The RCEP will have a spillover effect for Chinese manufactur­ers in the ASEAN. It will bring about more passengers for airlines (Spring Airlines for example) with a strong network and business to destinatio­ns in East Asia, Southeast Asia, Australia and New Zealand,” he said.

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