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Global shipping rates have spiked due to recent attacks on vessels in the Red Sea. Freightos CEO Zvi Schreiber (CRGO) joins Yahoo Finance's Rachelle Akuffo to discuss why numerous shipping companies have rerouted to avoid the area, lengthening journeys.
Schreiber notes Red Sea routes saw costs jump from $1,200 in November to $4,800 currently - nearly a 4x increase since the assault threats emerged. Still, he says this pales in comparison to peak COVID-era pricing, which surpassed $15,000 per container. "Although we're seeing a big spike, it's still moderate," compared to the pandemic era, Schreiber says.
The China-to-Europe corridor is among the most impacted by rerouting, with ships circumventing Africa instead, explains Schreiber. This major detour dramatically escalates costs and shipping timelines to Mediterranean and regional ports. Meanwhile, droughts have also temporarily constrained transit through the Panama Canal to the US East Coast.
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Editor's note: This article was written by Angel Smith
Video Transcript
RACHELLE AKUFFO: While staying in the shipping lane, JP Morgan warning that consumer price inflation might grow, thanks to rising global shipping costs. This comes after several shipping companies are avoiding the Red Sea due to the threat of those Houthi attacks targeting cargo ships. Well, that's what's going to cost the companies, maybe us.
Freightos is a booking platform providing real-time global pricing, and they're seeing some big price spikes. Zvi Schreiber, Freightos' CEO is here to break this down for us. Thank you so much for joining me this morning. So given that we're seeing several companies continuing to pull back and diverting around the Red Sea, how is this starting to add up cost-wise for these companies?
ZVI SCHREIBER: We're seeing quite a big jump in costs so. The Freightos terminal has data which tracks the daily prices of shipping. And our FBX11 index specifically tracks the cost of shipping a 40 foot container through the Suez Canal from China to Europe, for example. And that has jumped from about $1,200 in November, before these attacks started, to about $4,800. So it's gone up 4X during these attacks. So that's a pretty big jump.
Having said that, to put it in context, during COVID, that same price reached $15,000. So although we're seeing a big spike, it's still moderate, compared to what we saw a couple of years ago during COVID.
RACHELLE AKUFFO: So Zvi, which trade routes are seeing the biggest jump in cost? Because we saw some tempering, I believe, to the US coming out of December, but a different situation from China to Europe.