Freight forwarders are taking a ‘wait and see’ approach before making long-term air cargo capacity commitments as airlines saw demand drop 2% month-over-month in November as general airfreight volumes dipped for a ninth consecutive month, dashing hopes of a late peak season boost, according to the latest weekly market by CLIVE Data Services, part of Xeneta.

Chargeable weight in November was down 8% versus the same month of 2021, although the 1% reduction in global air cargo capacity, as airlines adapted to winter schedules, contributed to a stable ‘dynamic load factor’ of 61%, on a par with the previous month, based on the volume and weight perspectives of cargo flown and capacity available.

CLIVE noted that load factor, however, continued to sit well below last year’s extraordinary peak season. For instance, Europe to North America load factor in the week leading up to the Thanksgiving holiday sat at 74% this year, down 12% from the same week last year. 

“Amidst so much market uncertainty, industry parties are increasingly choosing shorter-term deals as they wait to see how business trends unfold in the coming months,” the report added.

It also said that the distribution of contract rates for shippers shows commitments of over three-month contracts hardly exist in Q4 this year.

Market "not worsening" but future "hard to read"

“What we are seeing is a lot of uncertainty still. After such a big drop of -8% in air cargo demand in October, we saw a little stability return in November, the market is not worsening, it’s just very hard to read longer-term,” said 

Niall van de Wouw, chief airfreight officer at Xeneta.

He added that this is reflected in the rise in short-term contracts, with forwarders unwilling to commit to long-term deals.

“Shippers should see some benefit from this in terms of their air and ocean budgets, and falling rates may provide one glimmer of hope for cash-strapped consumers that potentially lower shipping costs in 2023 and will make some goods more affordable. There are still so many influencing factors to consider, including the depreciation of the US dollar and its impact on trade,” van de Wouw, further said.

At Xeneta’s latest Customer Summit for ocean carriers, airlines, forwarders and shippers, there was a clear consensus among delegates that consumers will spend less on goods in 2023 than they did in 2022, he said, indicating a slow start to next year, said van de Wouw. 

CLIVE noted in its report that compared to last year, the global average rate for general air cargo declined for a third consecutive month in November, falling to a level last seen in October 2020.

However, average rates remained 85% above the pre-Covid level despite air cargo spot rates falling across the top three volume corridors in November.

The average November air cargo spot rate on the transpacific corridor of US$5.82 per kg was down 32% in comparison to last year, but still 139% above the 2019 level.

On the same corridor, ocean freight rates fell even more sharply, a decline of 79% over the same month last year, recovering close to the pre-Covid period (only 30% above the 2019 level), which will likely trigger a further modal shift from air cargo to the ocean as the sea freight market chaos eases.

On East Asia to North Europe corridor, CLIVE said November’s average air cargo spot rate was US$5.86 per kg. Impacted by the persistent war in Ukraine, this represented a 16% year-over-year decline.

Again, the ocean market witnessed a far greater fall as container freight rates fell 78% over the last year.

The air cargo spot rate from North Europe to US East stood at US$3.23 per kg in November, down 37% from last year’s level.

In contrast, ocean freight rates climbed 10% from the same period of 2021, nearly 3.5 times the 2019 level, making this the only routing among the top three volume corridors where the air cargo market remains somewhat competitive.



Please wait while the page is loading...

loader