Manila Bulletin

Hapag-Lloyd cuts costs as fuel prices rise

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FRANKFURT (Reuters) – German shipping company Hapag-Lloyd is cutting costs to cope with a rise in fuel prices that led it to slash full year earnings forecasts last month, its chief executive officer (CEO) told shareholde­rs on Tuesday.

"Major cost positions have risen more than initially expected and are pressuring operating margins," CEO Rolf Habben Jansen said in Hamburg.

"We are responding short-term to this developmen­t through forceful cost management and will keep Hapag-Lloyd competitiv­e this way," he added.

Among the measures being taken are accepting more valuable cargo, trying to reduce terminal contract costs and stripping out economical­ly inefficien­t ship systems, he said.

The effects of recent industry mergers have yet to be felt as the integratio­n process is only just starting, he added, referring to a merger in April of three Japanese rivals and Chinese approval for COSCO Shipping Holdings' takeover of Hong Kong peer Orient Overseas Internatio­nal.

Habben Jansen made no mention, however, of a Reuters report on Monday that bigger French rival CAM CGM had made a merger approach, which sent Hapag-Lloyd shares up to 10 percent higher. Hapag-Lloyd in June cut its full-year profit forecast, saying freight rates had recovered more slowly than expected, while fuel costs had ballooned as global oil prices respond to supply disruption­s and tightness.

The news led to several banks cutting their price targets on the stock, while the company stressed it hoped to reap substantia­l synergies from its 2017 merger with Arab peer UASC.

Habben Jansen also said the global ship orderbook had shrunk to just 11 percent of the total fleet. That should help bring supply and demand into a better balance over the next 2 1/2 to three years, he said.

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