Drewry’s Latest World Container Index Shows Container Rates Still Climbing as Early Peak Season Tightens the Market

Drewry’s newest weekly update shows container spot rates continuing their recent rise rather than flattening out. The World Container Index increased 3% week on week to $2,800 per 40-foot container, extending the current uptrend to a fourth straight week. The strongest fresh pressure is still coming from the main east-west lanes. Shanghai to Rotterdam rose 3% to $2,861, Shanghai to Genoa increased 4% to $4,253, Shanghai to New York climbed 6% to $4,597, and Shanghai to Los Angeles gained 3% to $3,473. Drewry said the latest move is being driven by rate increases on the Asia-Europe and transpacific routes as booking activity strengthens ahead of an earlier-than-usual peak season and before the expected July bunker adjustment factor changes. Drewry’s related weekly capacity commentary also says 47 blank sailings are expected over the next five weeks out of 707 scheduled departures, equal to a 7% cancellation rate, while 93% of services are still expected to sail.
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The latest WCI rise keeps freight exposure elevated on the Asia-Europe and transpacific lanes, with peak-season momentum building early.
Insurance is not the main headline driver, but geopolitical tension and longer routings are still part of the cost stack behind the market.
Bunker sensitivity remains high as cargo is frontloaded ahead of expected July BAF adjustments and longer routings continue to support costs.
Capacity is still mostly moving, but blank sailings, Red Sea diversion effects and tighter eastbound deployment keep route planning under pressure.
Stronger spot markets support chartering leverage, but the move still looks like a lane-specific rate surge rather than a full-market asset repricing event.
| Market lane | Current marker | Immediate operating read | Importance | Commercial consequence | Next checkpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Composite index direction | The WCI rose 3% to $2,800 per 40ft container. Fourth straight weekly increase | The market has not rolled over after the first rebound. It is still moving upward. | That matters because it confirms rate firmness is broad enough to keep the index rising, not just isolated on one route. | Shippers and forwarders face a higher risk that June procurement will clear at stronger levels than many expected earlier in the quarter. | Watch whether next week extends the run into a fifth straight increase or shows resistance after the latest carrier filings take effect. |
| Asia-Europe momentum | Shanghai to Rotterdam increased 3% to $2,861 and Shanghai to Genoa rose 4% to $4,253. Europe-bound strength persists | Europe lanes are still climbing into the early peak-season window rather than flattening. | This matters because the Asia-Europe complex is being lifted by front-loaded cargo and carrier pricing confidence even with relatively stable announced capacity. | Importers into North Europe and the Mediterranean may still face fresh general rate increase pressure in early June. | Watch whether announced FAK levels around $4,700 to North Europe and $5,500 to $5,700 to the Mediterranean begin to pull spot assessments higher again. |
| Transpacific pressure | Shanghai to New York rose 6% to $4,597 and Shanghai to Los Angeles gained 3% to $3,473. Eastbound U.S. trade remains tight | Transpacific eastbound is still gaining support from capacity tightening and surcharge activity. | That matters because this lane often becomes the most visible pressure point when early seasonal demand meets active carrier capacity management. | Beneficial cargo owners may face higher all-in transport bills if peak-season surcharges and fresh GRIs stick into June. | Watch the effect of ONE’s announced $2,000 per 40ft PSS from 1 June and whether additional carriers follow with similar filings. |
| Capacity discipline | Drewry says 47 blank sailings are expected over the next five weeks from 707 scheduled departures, equal to a 7% cancellation rate. Still managed, not fully open | Carriers are not allowing all capacity to flow freely even as cargo picks up. | This matters because spot-rate strength usually lasts longer when tighter demand is matched by disciplined network management. | Operators with schedule flexibility hold more leverage when rivals are trimming departures and preserving rate momentum. | Watch whether blank-sailing volumes rise further or stabilize after current June pricing actions are absorbed. |
| Disruption geography | Drewry says 49% of the expected disruptions are on transpacific eastbound services, 34% on Asia-Europe/Med, and 17% on the transatlantic. Disruption is unevenly distributed | The market is not tightening equally across all east-west trades. | That matters because lane-specific pricing power can be stronger than the headline composite index alone suggests. | Cargo owners on the Pacific side remain more exposed to capacity disruption than those trading the Atlantic. | Watch whether this distribution shifts as summer schedules settle and carriers rebalance vessel deployment. |
| Near-term rate outlook | Drewry expects further upward pressure in coming weeks as early peak-season demand strengthens through June. Forward signal remains bullish | Drewry is not describing the latest increase as a final spike. It is still pointing to additional upward pressure. | This matters because forward language from Drewry often shapes shipper expectations on timing, booking strategy and rate budgeting. | Delayed bookings may become more expensive if June cargo continues to be pulled forward ahead of higher bunker-linked charges. | Watch whether the next WCI confirms continued GRI pass-through or reveals early resistance from demand or added capacity. |
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