The starting point of prediction markets.

Container Carriers Eye Return to Red Sea Route

A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S and Hapag-Lloyd AG signaled confidence about resuming passage through the Red Sea, sending the container carriers’ shares down on expectation a return to the shorter route will ease capacity constraints and temper a surge in shipping rates.

Container Carriers Eye Return to Red Sea Route
News
Red-sea ship. Source: evolutionforwarding
Share

A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S and Hapag-Lloyd AG signaled confidence about resuming passage through the Red Sea, sending the container carriers’ shares down on expectation a return to the shorter route will ease capacity constraints and temper a surge in shipping rates.

In statements on Monday, the two said they’re redirecting a service that links the southern Mediterranean with China through the Red Sea and Suez Canal — rather make the longer journey around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope. Maersk, the world’s second-biggest container line, and No. 5 Hapag-Lloyd operate a capacity-sharing alliance known as Gemini.

The joint decision “comes following thorough assessments of the security situation in the Red Sea area,” according to the Maersk statement. “With this decision, the Gemini Cooperation takes a step towards a gradual return to a trans-Suez network.”

Under the plans, the first vessels to alter course on the Asia-Europe service will be the Majestic Maersk, which ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg shows is currently near Oman.

Shanghai Export Containerized Freight Index Level. Source: Shanghai Shipping Exchange, Bloomberg

Container vessels and other cargo ships have largely avoided the Red Sea since late 2023, when Yemen-based Houthis started attacking ships in solidarity with Palestinians during a conflict with Israel.

Some carriers were planning to return to the normal route earlier this year, but the Iran war sparked in late February revived threats to the maritime industry.

Taking a longer route around southern Africa to avoid conflict in the Mideast adds time and fuel costs, and stretches capacity. That, plus robust demand heading into peak season for ocean freight, combined to send spot container rates surging in recent weeks.

Source: seasonalliving

Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-06/maersk-hapag-lloyd-eyeing-return-to-red-sea-route-shares-fall