Chinese New Year 2024 is upon us, disrupting logistics from Asia starting Feb 10th. This event is expected to impact global shipping until Feb 21. Freight rates from Asia has skyrocketed with rates to the US surging by 3.5X and Europe by 6X. This increase is largely  due to the Red Sea crisis, further compounded by the Panama Canal’s capacity limitation. Businesses are advised to proactively share forecasts with freight forwarders in order to plan and procure space accordingly.

The state of the freight market is harder to determine as market conditions play a major role in determining freight prices. In this context, the Red Sea crisis is unmistakably prominent, as container lines have levied war-risk surcharges, introduced higher GRIs, and even pushed for peak-season surcharges to compensate for going around the Horn of Africa instead of the Suez Canal.

Freight rates between China and N.Europe exploded since the crisis, rising from around $1,200 per TEU in the first week of Dec ‘23 to over $5,200 per TEU in the last week of Jan ‘24 — a near five-fold increase. Freight rates have gone up across other major lanes as well, with the trans-Pacific China-US West Coast rising from roughly $1,600 per TEU in late Dec ‘23 to over $4,000 per TEU in the last week of Jan ‘24.

However, the prices seem to be stabilizing, as reflected in the Shanghai Containerized Freight Index (SCFI) from Jan 26. The rate increase seems to have peaked as the next few weeks during the CNY will be mellow. With consumer demand in a trough, and container capacity remaining high, there would be little incentive for shippers to frantically buy freight space, which would result in freight rates again ticking lower post-CNY.

The situation is further complicated for businesses shipping between China and the US East Coast or Gulf Coast, thanks to the droughts seen at the Panama Canal over the last year — a consequence of the El Niño climatic pattern. This reduced the number of vessels that could pass through daily, with the canal operating at 70% capacity today. The volume of loads allowed on every vessel have reduced as well, as lower water levels in the canal locks decrease the maximum depth of vessels.

The UN’s trade and development body, UNCTAD, has raised profound concerns over escalating disruptions to global trade.

It says that recent attacks on ships in the Red Sea, combined with geopolitical tensions affecting shipping in the Black Sea and the impacts of climate change on the Panama Canal, have given rise to a complex crisis affecting key trade routes.

Reference:

https://www.onesilq.com/blog/the-chinese-new-year-and-the-red-sea-crisis-will-not-be-enough-to-keep-freight-rates-high

https://unctad.org/news/red-sea-black-sea-and-panama-canal-unctad-raises-alarm-global-trade-disruptions

More News
Exim rebrands as ExSyn: We celebrate our 30-year heritage with a new brand and website that bring alive our values and purpose
News · 27/03/2021

Today we announce that Exim is rebranding as ExSyn. We are presenting a new brand identity and website as a reflection of our relentless transformation over the course of 30 years serving the pharma and chemical industries. The new brand builds upon our core strengths as a sourcing company and captures our most essential duty: helping improve people’s health and lives.

EU & US Move to Phase Out Animal Testing
News · 05/06/2026

In a converging policy shift on both sides of the Atlantic, European regulators this week published a roadmap toward fully replacing animal testing for chemical safety assessments, while the US Environmental Protection Agency issued a rare update to its list of alternative test methods.

Global Pharma Fine Chemicals: Compliance & Localisation
News · 02/06/2026

The global pharmaceutical fine chemicals sector is undergoing a profound transformation, with India emerging as a central growth engine amid sweeping changes in supply chain strategies and regulatory priorities. As drug makers and contract manufacturers adapt to stricter oversight and evolving sourcing preferences, the industry’s focus is shifting rapidly from cost efficiency to compliance, localisation and technical sophistication.

In focus: Zinc Dialkyl Dithio Phosphate
Products in focus · 02/06/2026

Zinc Dialkyl Dithio Phosphate (ZDDP) belongs to a  family of coordination compounds classified as members of transition metal dithiophosphate.

ZDDP is widely used based on a combination of different selected alcohols thus providing antiwear performance and enhanced thermal and hydrolytic stability. In combination with other additives, it is especially used for the formulation of hydraulic fluids, industrial gear oils, metalworking fluids, greases and automotive engine oils.