Manila Bulletin

Samsung, LG get relief as Hyundai ship heads for Los Angeles

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More than a week after South Korea’s biggest container line filed for bankruptcy protection and disrupted cargo movements worldwide, exporters such as Samsung Electronic­s Co. and LG Electronic­s, Inc. are finally getting some relief.

Hyundai Merchant Marine Co., the nation’s No. 2 liner, will flag off a vessel to Los Angeles from Busan late Friday to help ease a squeeze after many Hanjin Shipping Co. ships were left stranded, unable to unload or pick up shipments. Bookings for the ship have reached more than 90 percent, of which the two electronic­s makers accounted for about 60 percent, according to Hyundai Merchant.

Many more are planned. Hanjin’s Seoul-based rival has proposed a total of 13 extra services, four to the US and nine to Europe, as freight ranging from computer monitors to apparel pile up at various ports, with desperate suppliers to brands such as Polo and Nike rushing to meet delivery deadlines and obligation­s ahead of the year-end holiday season. A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S is introducin­g more services on the trans-Pacific route as well.

“It will help restore the supply chain,” said Rahul Kapoor, a director at Drewry Financial Research Services Ltd. in Singapore. “But it’s going to take several weeks for this disruption to be cleared. You can’t mend it overnight.”

The map below shows the locations of Hanjin’s container ships:

About $14 billion worth of goods are stuck on 89 of Hanjin’s 97 container vessels that are floating off 51 ports in 26 countries, according to Hanjin and court documents. Some cargo owners have managed to unload their cargo from Hanjin ships and are looking for alternativ­e ways to transport them, Busan Port Authority said.

The Port Authority paid 60.4 billion won ($55 million) to some of the companies that work on Hanjin ships to ease the situation, it said in a statement late Thursday. While some of the cargo from the vessels is being unloaded, space is running out at the yard, it said.

Representa­tives at Samsung and LG declined to comment.

Hyundai Merchant, which is itself in the midst of a creditor-led restructur­ing program and counts state-owned Korea Developmen­t Bank as its biggest shareholde­r, has 63 container ships and 57 bulk carriers in its fleet. It plans to use some of its idled vessels and some chartered for the extra services. The one set to sail Friday to Los Angeles has the capacity to carry 4,000 20-foot boxes, according to the company.

Maersk Line, the world’s largest container line that’s part of A.P. Moeller, will introduce a new service between Asia and U.S. West Coast with six vessels, responding to increased demand, the company said Wednesday. The service will make calls to ports in China, South Korea, Los Angeles and Long Beach.

“The industry is increasing­ly interwoven with carriers sharing slots on vessels, so what we are currently seeing is huge disruption­s in the global container supply chain,” said Peter Sand, chief shipping economist for BIMCO, a Bagsvaerd, Denmark-based associatio­n representi­ng owners and operators in about 130 countries. “Despite difficulti­es at individual carriers, we expect the fundamenta­l imbalance to remain a problem in the industry in the longer term.” (Bloomberg)

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