By Vera Eckert and Elke Ahlswede
FRANKFURT (Reuters) – German container shipper Hapag-Lloyd on Thursday posted a net profit of 3.2 billion euros ($3.43 billion) for the first nine months of 2023, down by 77% from a year earlier, and cut its forecasts for full-year earnings.
Net profit was down from 13.8 billion euros in comparable 2022 when the shipping industry, a proxy for global trade, boomed amid post-pandemic recovery and because logistics disruptions drove up prices for consumers.
This year, the global economic slowdown and the clearing of port log-jams sent freight rates down sharply, which has also harmed Hapag-Lloyd competitor Maersk.
“At the moment, everything is under pressure. Freight rates in some segment are at a level where you cannot operate ships profitably,” chief executive Rolf Habben Jansen said in an interview with Reuters.
Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) were now seen to be ranging between 2.2-3.1 billion euros, down from a 2-4 billion euros range quoted before.
EBITDA was expected to be in a range of 4.1-5 billion euros vis-a-vis a previous range of 4-6 billion euros.
The forecasts remained exposed to uncertainty amid geopolitical conflicts, inflationary pressure and high inventory levels of customers, the company said.
Transport volumes, however, remained almost at par with those in the prior year at 8.9 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU), up nearly 5% year-on-year in the third quarter.
Relief also came from lower shipping fuel prices, which dropped by 19% to an average $611 per tonne in the nine months.
Freight rates were off 45% in the nine months at $1,604 per TEU, taking revenue down 46% to 14.1 billion euros.
Habben Jansen said the company expects no short-term recovery of the rates and has responded by cutting several services on key routes.
But the cancellations so far do not exceed 20% of previous voyages schedules.
Cuts to staff, totalling 13,500 worldwide, were currently not on the agenda.
Maersk is seeking up to 10,000 reductions.
A small free float of tradeable shares in Hapag-Lloyd did not change hands early on Thursday.
($1 = 0.9340 euros)
(Reporting by Vera Eckert; Editing by Janane Venkatraman and Linda Pasquini)