Two themes defined the week: carriers are still managing and withdrawing short-term trans-Pacific capacity as tariff-driven frontloading fades, and rates have paused — spot pricing remains stable after recent drops. Capacity cuts are creating more uneven weekly sailings, while a Yangtze River typhoon brought export delays that may cause bunching and inland congestion in the weeks ahead. Importers should expect intermittent service gaps, maintain flexible booking strategies, and monitor port appointment availability.
Highlights
Carriers are trimming trans-Pacific sailings as demand normalizes post-frontload, producing volatile weekly departures and more blank sailings. Slot availability may appear sufficient, but departure timing is less predictable.
Congestion patterns are mixed. Arrival bunching from capacity shifts and weather is adding landside pressure. The Yangtze typhoon in early August disrupted China’s inland export flows, delaying vessels and creating backlog pockets likely to ripple into North America. While some West Coast terminals improved earlier this summer, reactivated sailings plus weather delays could bring short-term dwell increases and chassis shortages during peak weeks.
Key points:
Asia→North America spot rates were steady for a third week, as capacity control offsets easing demand. The sharp declines of prior months have given way to a more stable pattern, with occasional spikes possible during blankings or weather disruptions.
Long-term contract talks remain cautious, with many shippers choosing short or rolling terms to stay flexible. Carriers continue signaling rate discipline and potential GRIs/PSSs, but no major marketwide announcements occurred this week.
Key points:
Carriers are redeploying vessels and blanking selectively to match post-frontload demand, supporting rates but reducing schedule reliability. Capacity swings are becoming a structural feature in east-west trades.
No permanent service cuts were announced; activity remains tactical — blankings, reallocations, and smaller vessel shifts. Yangtze delays prompted alerts and equipment adjustments. Shippers should stay in close contact with carriers/NVOCCs and plan contingencies for time-sensitive cargo.
Key points:
Typhoon Co-May disrupted Yangtze exports, delaying loadings and causing vessel bunching. North American arrivals could see congestion in the next 1–3 weeks.
Key point:
The week’s market combines tactical capacity control with localized weather impacts. Rates are stable, but timing risk is elevated.
Recommendations: