Hapag-Lloyd Q1 Loss Deepens as Hormuz Disruption and Weak Rates Keep Pressure on Containers

Hapag-Lloyd reported an unsatisfactory first quarter for 2026, posting a net loss of €218.6 million after a profit of €446.2 million in the same period last year, as lower freight rates, severe weather disruption, and the Middle East conflict all weighed on results. Group revenue fell to €4.2 billion from €5.1 billion, while the average freight rate dropped to $1,330 per TEU, down 9.5% year on year. The company said reroutings, delays, and extended transit times linked to the conflict in the Middle East added further cost pressure, while weaker demand and sufficient transport capacity kept the broader market difficult. Hapag-Lloyd maintained its full-year 2026 guidance, with EBITDA expected between $1.1 billion and $3.1 billion and EBIT between -$1.5 billion and $0.5 billion.
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| Pressure lane | Current marker | Immediate read | Primary drag | Commercial consequence | Next checkpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group earnings | Q1 2026 net result was negative €218.6 million, versus positive €446.2 million a year earlier. Quarter swung negative | The quarter moved decisively from profit to loss despite higher transported volumes. | Lower freight rates, operational disruption, and added cost pressure from reroutings and delays. | Earnings quality deteriorated sharply and forced management back onto a cost-control footing. | Watch whether Q2 shows any rate recovery strong enough to offset the current disruption burden. |
| Freight pricing | Average freight rate fell to $1,330 per TEU from $1,471 per TEU. Down 9.5% | The market is still not giving carriers enough pricing support even with major network disruption in play. | Weaker demand for container transportation while market transport capacity remained sufficient. | Volume growth becomes less valuable when the rate base is falling this quickly. | Watch whether spot-rate and contract-rate conditions improve later in the year or stay soft. |
| Operational disruption | Hapag-Lloyd said severe weather and the Middle East conflict caused reroutings, delays, and extended transit times. Network under strain | The problem is not just lower rates. The cost to operate the network has gone up at the same time. | Port disruption, severe weather, and Middle East conflict, including Hormuz-related blockage and detours. | Longer transit times, added storage and operating costs, and more complex schedule recovery across the system. | Watch for management commentary on whether Middle East disruption eases or remains a multi-quarter drag. |
| Asia-Europe revenue | Revenue in Asia-Europe fell to €1,006.9 million from €1,230.0 million. Lane revenue down | Europe-facing business remained meaningfully softer year on year. | Lower rates and a more difficult demand backdrop. | One of the group’s biggest tradelanes contributed materially less revenue than a year ago. | Watch whether Asia-Europe rate improvement later in 2026 can stabilize the lane’s revenue run-rate. |
| Asia-America revenue | Revenue in Asia-America fell to €1,362.1 million from €1,789.8 million. Biggest trade drop | The largest liner trade in the group’s mix saw a sharp year-on-year revenue decline. | Softer freight rates and weaker revenue capture despite continued cargo movement. | The largest revenue engine was not strong enough to absorb disruption elsewhere. | Watch whether North American cargo demand and rate conditions improve into the second half. |
| Europe-America revenue | Revenue in Europe-America fell to €744.3 million from €978.5 million. North Atlantic softer | North Atlantic business also weakened materially. | Management presentation pointed to softer North Atlantic demand as part of the quarter’s pressure mix. | Weakness was broad-based rather than isolated to one major route family. | Watch whether Atlantic trade conditions recover or remain one of the softer pieces of the portfolio. |
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