June18 , 2026

    Shipping sector sees profit drop as market stabilizes

    Related

    CONCOR Launches Long-Haul Pig Iron Movement from Andhra Pradesh to North India

    State-owned logistics major Container Corporation of India (CONCOR) has...

    NISAA Backs Northern Railway’s Logistics Push, Assures Full Support for Rail Freight Reforms

    The Northern India Steamer Agents Association (NISAA) has welcomed...

    Chennai Port Launches Cargo Incentive Scheme with Up to 80% Wharfage Concessions

    The Chennai Port Authority (ChPA) has introduced the Non-Containerized...

    Shipping Giants Eye Opportunities in Ennore Port Expansion Project

    Ennore Port, officially known as Kamarajar Port, is drawing...

    Share

    Global shipping profits have corrected sharply, with major carriers’ combined EBIT falling from $17  billion in 2024-Q3 to just over $5 billion in 2025-Q3, yet the market remains above pre-pandemic levels, signalling a sustainable new normal.

    In issue 742 of Sea-Intelligence Sunday Spotlight, the 2025-Q3 financial performance of major global shipping lines revealed a clear post-peak correction.

    Combined EBIT fell to $5.12  billion, down sharply from $17.06  billion in 2024-Q3.

    Despite double-digit freight rate declines, profitability remains well above pre-pandemic 2019 levels, suggesting the market is settling into a sustainable “new normal.”

    Operational data shows resilience: six of seven carriers grew global transported volumes, reflecting the impact of new vessel deliveries and reworked service networks that have absorbed longer Red Sea transit times without the panic-pricing of 2024.

    Unit profitability (EBIT per TEU) varied widely. COSCO led with 350 $/TEU, followed by ZIM  at 280 $/TEU— the only carriers above 200 $/TEU.

    Other major players saw margins compress below 100 $/TEU: ONE (85 USD/TEU), Maersk (83 USD/TEU), and Hapag-Lloyd (65 USD/TEU).

    By comparison, the lowest EBIT/TEU in this group in 2024-Q3 was 335 $/TEU, underscoring the magnitude of the market correction.

    In October, global schedule reliability fell sharply in October after three steady months, underscoring the ongoing volatility that had affected major carriers.

    spot_img