Hanjin’s Bankruptcy Reveals Much About The World Economy

 | Sep 04, 2016 02:10AM ET

Summary: This cycle’s combination of slow growth and widespread overcapacity have taken another victim – global shipping giant Hanjin (KS:117930). Those who like exciting news turn to Zero Hedge and read “Supply-Chain Contagion Arrives – ‘Global Trade’ Roiled, Cargo-Owners Panic “. Those who like accurate news turn to this report from Stratfor.

Buffeted by overcapacity in the global shipping market, South Korean giant Hanjin Shipping Co. appears to be sailing toward oblivion. In the past week, creditors pulled the plug after 1 trillion won ($900 million) in support failed to keep the company afloat, forcing Hanjin to file for bankruptcy protection. Seoul Central District Court, which will decide the eventual fate of the company, has set a Nov. 25 deadline for Hanjin to develop another restructuring plan, but many experts think liquidation will be the most likely outcome.

In the short term, the company’s demise has temporarily raised some shipping rates, which have remained persistently low industrywide thanks to the sluggish global economy. It likely will also cause some supply disruptions during the peak season for orders of holiday goods.

But even if the company, the eighth largest by capacity in the world, finds an unlikely way out of its predicament, the sluggish global demand growth will continue to hamper the industry. In addition, the collapse of Hanjin deals another blow to the South Korean economy, which faces stiff competition in the high-tech market from rivals Japan and China.

Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images.

h3 Hanjin’s Decline/h3

Hanjin, which accounts for roughly 7 percent of Far East-North American trade, operates about 600,000 20-foot equivalent units (TEUs), 3 percent of existing global shipping capacity. But its size was not enough to save it. There have been numerous mergers, alliances and failures in the shipping industry made to deal with the fallout of the global economic crisis and a shifting world economy. For instance, Neptune Orient Lines and United Arab Shipping Co. both recently have been absorbed by much larger operations. Shipping rates continue to remain at low levels and in the first half of 2016, Hanjin saw a net loss of 473 billion won. Hanjin had also amassed a debt of over 6.1 trillion won, nearly 20 percent of which was due before the end of 2017.

Hanjin was further hampered by the way its fleet ownership was structured. It owns less than half of its ships and leases the rest. Because the charterers who own the ships have been reluctant to decrease leasing rates, even in light of market overcapacity, it has been difficult for operators like Hanjin to recover operating costs when shipping rates remain low.