By Tyler Durden  November 12 2022

The latest Bloomberg Trade Tracker reveals an ominous outlook for world trade due to soaring interest rates, the war in Ukraine, a slowdown in the US economy, and zero Covid in China. A shortage of containers has entirely reversed into a glut as crashing shipping rates and canceled sails gain momentum during what is supposed to be the busiest shipping period of the year.

Earlier this week, we explained that economic storm clouds are gathering worldwide as some of the largest shipping companies warn about decelerating global trade. US shipper FedEx and Danish shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S have been vocal about emerging signs of a global slowdown.

FedEx CFO Michael Lenz told an audience Tuesday at the Robert W Baird Global Industrial Conference earlier this week that his company parked planes cut costs in response to weak demand for package delivery.

The Covid boom for goods has evaporated. Consumers have switched from buying computers and televisions to spending whatever money they have left on experiences.

We predict in May that an inventory glut, i.e., the reverse bullwhip effect, would cool the booming freight market. It’s now peak shipping season — retailers have already canceled overseas orders as freight companies reduce shipping capacity ahead of Black Friday and Christmas.

Trans-Pacific shipping rates are cratering.

Slumping global demand and faltering world trade has led to another problem: a massive container glut at ports.

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Italian container depot owner Sogese chief executive Andrea Monti told Container xChange:

Monti told Container xChange that peak shipping season “technically did not happen this year” because of the global slowdown, as many retailers are left holding high inventory levels.

Johannes Schlingmeier, cofounder and CEO of Container xChange, said:

The rise in canceled sailings was reported by maritime research company Drewry, indicated between late November and early December, 14% of sailings have been canceled on the world’s top shipping lanes.

Container prices on the Los Angeles to Shanghai line and JP Morgan’s consolidated global manufacturing PMIs have declined since late 2021.

This year’s monetary tightenings by global central banks take about 9-12 months to filter through the real economy, which means world trade will slow even more in the quarters ahead. The latest evidence of trouble ahead if a glut of containers at ports.

Source: ZeroHedge