Maersk sees global trade disruptions lasting throughout 2024
Global transport disruptions from the Red Sea conflict are expected to persist, according to A.P. Moller-Maersk. The shipping company has revised its financial guidance upwards, driven by heightened freight rates as vessels avoid the Suez Canal.

The comments come as Maersk on Thursday raised its financial guidance for a third time in three months as higher freight rates continue to boost the company’s profits. The global liner industry has been upended by conflicts that are forcing ships to sale south of Africa rather than through the Suez Canal.
The Danish shipping group now sees underlying earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization of $9 billion to $11 billion this year, compared with a previous forecast of $7 billion to $9 billion. Analysts had expected $8.76 billion on average in estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Maersk had already raised its full-year profit forecast in May as well as in June, when it said congestion in the Red Sea was having a larger than previously expected impact on the world’s supply lines. That disruption is “now expected to continue at least until the end of 2024,” the company said on Thursday.

“Trading conditions remain subject to higher than normal volatility given the unpredictability of the Red Sea situation and the lack of clarity of supply and demand in the fourth quarter,” Maersk said.

“The strong development in container freight rates in recent months makes the guidance upgrade somewhat expected,” Brian Godsk Borsting, chief analyst at Danske Bank Credit Research, said in a note.
Maersk also published preliminary second-quarter revenue and profit numbers — ahead of a full report due Aug. 7 — which missed average analyst estimates.
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