Manila Bulletin

CMA CGM sees calmer waters for container shipping

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PARIS (Reuters) – The global container-shipping sector is in its strongest position in years thanks to sweeping consolidat­ion and stronger economic growth, leaving it well placed to withstand competitio­n from trains on major Asia-Europe routes, France's CMA CGM said.

Container lines, which transport everything from television­s to fresh fruit and dominate global freight volumes, are emerging from a severe downturn that culminated in last year's collapse of South Korea's Hanjin Shipping.

CMA CGM, the world's third-largest container line, on Friday reported better second-quarter profits and said it expected operating profits in the second half of the year to exceed its first-half performanc­e.

"Last year was a bad year, 2017 is a good year and 2018 should be a pretty steady one," CMA CGM Chief Executive Rodolphe Saade, 47, told Reuters in an interview in Paris. "With the consolidat­ion in the sector, the developmen­t of alliances and the favorable market conditions, I can't see a crisis coming."

Based in the Mediterran­ean port of Marseille, CMA CGM is controlled by the Saade family. Chairman Jacques Saade, who founded the firm in 1978 after leaving his country of birth, Lebanon, handed the CEO role to his son Rodolphe this year.

A series of major acquisitio­ns, including CMA CGM's $2.4-billion takeover of Singapore-based APL and market leader Maersk Line's $4-billion deal to acquire Hamburg Sud, have curbed overcapaci­ty. Vessel-sharing alliances between container lines have also helped cut slack. That said, consolidat­ion in the sector has probably run its course for now, Saade said.

Demand is expected to grow by 4-4.5 percent this year, outstrippi­ng an expected 3 percent rise in supply.

Reflecting the strength of the turnaround, CMA CGM confirmed in its quarterly results that it was ordering nine new vessels, all among the largest ever built in the sector.

The ships will be built by Chinese shipyards Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuildi­ng (Group) and Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuildi­ng, both owned by state-run China State Shipbuildi­ng Corporatio­n, CMA CGM said in a statement late on Tuesday.

Saade rejected criticism that the orders risked recreating a supply glut, saying the vessels were tailored for busy Asia-north Europe routes where scale was crucial and its partners in the vessel-sharing Ocean Alliance already used extra-large ships.

Existing vessels used on AsiaEurope routes would be transferre­d to other markets such as the trans-Pacific, he said.

CMA CGM declined to disclose the value of the order, which press reports have put at $1.2 billion, but said it would finance the deal through bank loans and its own funds.

The group will decide in the coming weeks whether to use liquefied natural gas (LNG) to power the vessels in what would be a first for large-scale container ships, Saade said.

LNG has been touted as a solution for shipping firms as an alternativ­e to bunker fuel before new internatio­nal standards on fuel emissions take effect in 2020.

CMA CGM would take into account in its decision the need to develop an LNG supply chain for vessels, Saade noted.

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