Weaker ocean rates hit Maersk Q1 profit

Logistics, terminal revenue partially offset container decline

(Photo: FreightWaves/Jim Allen)

First-quarter profits declined from a year ago, Maersk said, as increased container volumes failed to overcome pressured ocean rates.

The world’s second-largest box carrier (OTC: AMKBY) said that logistics and terminal revenue partially offset weaker liner results. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) slipped to $1.8 billion from $2.7 billion, while operating earnings (EBIT) was $340 million, down from $1.3 billion from the year-ago quarter. EBIT margin slid to 2.6% from 9.4%.

Geopolitics, demand uncertainty and over-capacity muted rates on benchmark east-west routes in the first quarter. The Iran conflict and rising fuel costs have lifted box prices in more recent weeks.    

“We’ve seen strong demand across most regions this quarter, supporting robust volume growth in our three business segments,” said Vincent Clerc, chief executive, in a release. ” Officer at Maersk.. “In Ocean in particular, market volatility remains high and industry oversupply continues to put pressure on rates. In this environment our disciplined focus on cost management contributes to resilient performance.”

Clerc said the carrier’s flexible network, which includes the Gemini Cooperation with Hapag-Lloyd, lowered ocean unit cost by 7% despite disrupted supply chains from the conflict in the Middle East.

The Copenhagen-based company maintained guidance of 2%-4% growth in container volumes in 2026. It added plans to buy back $1 billion in shares this year remains on track.

Read more articles by Stuart Chirls here.

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Stuart Chirls

Stuart Chirls is a journalist who has covered the full breadth of railroads, intermodal, container shipping, ports, supply chain and logistics for Railway Age, the Journal of Commerce and IANA. He has also staffed at S&P, McGraw-Hill, United Business Media, Advance Media, Tribune Co., The New York Times Co., and worked in supply chain with BASF, the world's largest chemical producer. Reach him at stuartchirls@firecrown.com.