MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company has announced updated freight rates for cargo moving from Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to destinations in Europe, citing shifts in market dynamics and capacity adjustments.
According to the carrier, the new tariff structure reflects current supply–demand conditions on these trade corridors, including vessel deployment changes, port congestion challenges and fluctuating bunker fuel costs. The revised freight rates are intended to better align pricing with operational realities, while maintaining competitiveness and service reliability for shippers.
MSC noted that the rate update affects both full container loads (FCL) and less-than-container-load (LCL) services, with specific adjustments varying by cargo type and routing. The company has communicated the changes to its agency networks and customers, emphasizing transparency and advance notice to support logistics planning.
Shippers and freight forwarders are assessing the impact of the updated rates on their supply chains, with some industry players expecting potential cost pass-throughs to end customers. Export sectors such as apparel, textiles, seafood and light engineering products—which form a significant share of Sri Lankan and Bangladeshi outbound volumes—could see changes in landed costs to European markets.
MSC reaffirmed its commitment to stable capacity deployment and on-time vessel schedules, even as the freight rate landscape evolves. The carrier continues to monitor market trends and collaborate with partners to optimize services across South Asia–Europe corridors, where competition and trade volumes remain robust.
The rate revision underscores broader pricing pressures in global container shipping, where carriers adjust strategies to balance network efficiency with commercial sustainability amid ongoing demand shifts.
