Maersk raises guidance again as Red Sea attacks boost rates
Maersk had already raised its 2024 profit forecast in May, June and August, as the Red Sea conflict was having a larger than previously expected impact on the world’s supply lines.

Maersk now sees underlying earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation of $11 billion to $11.5 billion this year, topping both its prior forecast range and the average $10.1 billion estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Maersk said earlier this month it will start its vessel-sharing partnership with Hapag-Lloyd AG in 2025 by sailing south of Africa, indicating the container lines expect the Red Sea to remain unsafe well into next year.
On Monday, the Danish shipping line also said it expects global container demand growth to be 6% this year, up from a range of 4%-6% seen previously. Maersk shares opened 2.4% higher in Copenhagen on Tuesday, before erasing the gains to drop 0.6% at 9:25 a.m.
Still, medium-term prospects for the shipping company remain somewhat gloomy. Maersk faces potential overcapacity in the container shipping market in 2025-26 and possibly longer, while there is a latent risk that the situation for container-shipping companies will worsen when the conflict in the Red Sea is resolved, Morten Holm Enggaard, an analyst at Jyske Bank A/S, said in a note.
Maersk, which controls about one-sixth of the world’s container trade, has in recent years sought to grow in land-based transport and freight-forwarding businesses — where profit margins historically have been higher than at sea. Still, last quarter it dropped a bid for Deutsche Bahn AG’s logistics unit DB Schenker, which Danish peer DSV A/S ended up acquiring for €14.3 billion ($15.5 billion).
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