Asian, European Shipping Lines Form New Alliance
May 13 2016 - 6:00AM
Dow Jones News
SEOUL—Some of the biggest Asian and European container-shipping
operators left out of a recent wave of industry consolidation have
agreed to form a new alliance, in a bid to rival the dominance of
global giants such as Maersk Line and Mediterranean Shipping
Co.
The vessel-sharing deal will comprise six shipping lines, namely
the Japanese trio of Nippon Yusen K.K., Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd.
and Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd.; Germany's Hapag-Lloyd AG; and South
Korea's Hanjin Shipping Co.
Hyundai Merchant Marine Co., which was expected to be part of
the alliance, said Friday it was excluded from the new grouping,
but could be part of it later.
Two people involved in the deal said Thursday that seven Asian
and European shipping lines, including Hyundai, would form an
alliance and announce the decision by Friday.
"The six-member alliance is not final and definitive. The door
is still open to us. We expect to have no problem joining the group
once our debt restructuring program with creditors ends
successfully," said a Hyundai spokesman, adding that the company is
discussing its entry into the group in early June.
An official at Korea's financial regulator, the Financial
Services Commission, said Hyundai's exclusion is partly because the
company is under creditor-led debt restructuring and in the final
stages of negotiations with foreign shipowners to cut rates for its
chartered fleet.
Hanjin said in a statement that the new alliance, accounting for
about a fifth of the global container-fleet capacity, is scheduled
to begin operations in April 2017 upon approval from relevant
regulatory authorities.
Being part of an alliance has become imperative for the
industry, which is marred by a 30% oversupply of vessels in the
water as well as rock-bottom freight rates—well below break-even
levels for much of the past two years. Alliance partners share
ships, networks and port calls that cut their costs by hundreds of
millions of dollars annually.
Several of the world's major shipping lines, however, risk being
left on the sidelines as a deep downturn in the shipping business
crashed against the industry and helps break apart long-standing
agreements among carriers.
Last month, CMA CGM SA and China's Cosco Group, the
third-largest and fourth-largest shipping lines by capacity, said
they would form the Ocean Alliance, pulling in Hong Kong's Orient
Overseas Container Line and Taiwan's Evergreen Marine Corp. The
move unraveled other pacts, triggering a new round of deal-making
to share vessel space.
Maersk Line, the A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S shipping unit that is
the world's biggest container line by capacity, is teamed up with
No. 2 carrier Mediterranean Shipping, in the 2M alliance.
Significant cost cuts are necessary for the two ailing Korean
companies, which move the bulk of the country's exports. Hanjin and
Hyundai are each undergoing widespread restructuring by main
creditor Korea Development Bank to avoid going bankrupt.
Write to In-Soo Nam at In-Soo.Nam@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 13, 2016 05:45 ET (09:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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