Sea-Intelligence forecasts the container shipping market will shift into cyclical overcapacity, peaking in 2027 at levels last seen during the 2016 price wars.
In issue 734 of Sea-Intelligence Sunday Spotlight, Sea-Intelligence conducted an analysis of the future global supply and demand balance for the container shipping industry.
The study, which incorporates several operational factors, forecasts a structural shift towards cyclical overcapacity, peaking in 2027 at levels last seen during the 2016 container shipping price wars.
The projection began with a baseline comparison of nominal vessel supply against expected container demand growth, then adjusted capacity data for four main factors: the long-term slowdown in vessel productivity, port congestion impacts, capacity losses from the Red Sea crisis, and anticipated vessel scrapping.
Demand forecasts were aligned with real-world GDP growth.
The adjusted model (Figure 1) shows the market moving from recent capacity deficits to notable overcapacity, peaking in 2027 at a level comparable to 2016’s intense price competition.
Although substantial, this overcapacity is less severe than that experienced during the 2009 financial crisis.
This outlook assumes the Red Sea crisis will be resolved by mid-2026, restoring significant capacity to the market.
Significant uncertainties remain. The forecast relies on a marked increase in vessel scrapping from 2026, expected to remove 13 per cent of the global fleet aged 20 years or more.
The resolution timing of the Red Sea crisis is critical; a prolonged disruption would continue to absorb capacity, easing oversupply.
Conversely, the ongoing US trade war risks suppressing demand, while additional vessel orders could worsen the projected overcapacity.
Recently, US President Donald Trump announced that a 25 per cent tariff will be imposed on all imported heavy-duty trucks starting.
