高盛供应链指数1.5年来首次出现“拥堵”
Goldman's Supply Chain Index Set To "Congest" For First Time In 1.5 Years

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/goldmans-supply-chain-index-set-rise-first-time-15-years

由于运输成本上升和积压,供应链拥堵加剧: 高盛的 Jordan Alliger 在周一发布的报告中表示,供应链拥堵指数在经历了 1.5 年的下降后出现了上升迹象,有可能达到 3 的水平(最高为 10)。 这一增长背后的原因主要归因于集装箱船延误加剧和海运集装箱运费飙升。 尽管本周周瓶颈得分没有突破“3”阈值,但与前一周相比已经飙升了3.5%,显示出持续上升的轨迹。 从中国到北美西海岸的集装箱运输变得越来越昂贵,并且根据过去的趋势,人们担心价格可能会进一步飙升。 此外,由于来自红海南部的船只绕行好望角,延长了航行时间,全球集装箱运力已经紧张。 运输需求的增长也可能导致成本上升。 尽管目前美国东部港口的积压情况并未达到新冠大流行期间观察到的前所未有的水平,但仍有迹象表明出现了堵塞。 目前,一个集装箱从中国运送到美国大约需要 48 天,而 2021-22 年供应链危机期间预计需要 80 多天。 对于这些上涨的运费的可持续性仍然存在疑问,特别是与大流行期间达到的峰值费率相比。 阿波罗管理公司(Apollo Management)首席经济学家托斯顿·斯洛克(Torsten Slok)也对供应链压力回升和集装箱运费飙升表示担忧。 他列举了导致运输成本上涨的几个因素,例如苏伊士运河交通量低、亚洲某些港口的干扰以及库存补充导致的需求增加。 与卡车、火车和飞机等其他运输方式不同,只有波罗的海好望角型指数出现了显着增长。 如果全球经济正在经历快速衰退,那么运输费用将会全面下降,而不是像今天所观察到的那样继续攀升。 最终,关键问题在于确定新发现的供应链拥堵是否会形成势头还是短暂的。

相关文章

原文

Goldman's Jordan Alliger released his latest supply chain congestion note on Monday, informing clients that for the first time in 1.5 years, the supply chain congestion index is on the verge of rising from two to three, with ten being the most congested. This resurgence in snarled supply chains is driven mainly by increasing container ship backlogs and soaring ocean container shipping rates. 

"While our weekly bottleneck scale remained slightly below the level of '3' this week as the overall scale remained unchanged at '2', the absolute level of our congestion index increased once again versus the prior week (+3.5% w/w; Exhibit 1); should next week's index reading show an increase of just ~1%, the weekly bottleneck scale would push up to a level of '3' for the first time in over a year and a half," Alliger explained. 

He continued, "As noted last week, while the recent uptick bears monitoring as it continues to reflect a combination of steadily rising container ship backlogs and re-surging ocean container shipping rates (China-to-US ocean container rate was up over 500% YoY at the beginning of July), we stress that even at a scaled bottleneck reading of '3' (should the index continue to rise from here), system-wide supply chain fluidity still appears quite favorable relative to the index reading of '10' experienced during peak levels of Covid-induced supply chain congestion." 

A seasonal view of ocean container shipping rates between China/East Asia and North America's West Coast is very concerning. Global container capacity is stretched thin due to ship reroutings from the southern Red Sea around Cape of Good Hope, which adds more time to sails. Robust demand for shipping could pressure rates higher. However, it remains to be seen if rates follow the 2021 summer surge. 

"The key question remains whether the last stumbling blocks around congestion ease in the US - notably the improving warehouses as well as the East Coast port backlogs. Should this continue to mitigate, then it is conceivable we could see the index being back to a '1' in 2024," Alliger pointed out. 

While congestion outside US East and West Coast ports is far from Covid highs, there are still signs of backlog at East Coast ports. 

The door-to-door shipping of a container from China to the US is now 48 days, down from +80 days during the supply chain mess in 2021-22. 

In a separate note, Apollo Management Chief Economist Torsten Slok warned supply chain stresses are coming back as container rates soar: 

Container freight rates are rising, and it currently costs $9,000 to transport a 40-foot container from Shanghai to New York. At the peak of Covid, the cost was $16,000, see the first chart below. The sources for the rise in transportation costs are Suez crossings significantly below normal levels, disruptions at some Asian ports, and growth in demand due to restocking. The rise in transportation costs is very specific to containers. Freight rates by truck, rail, and air have generally not increased by the same magnitude. Only the Baltic Capesize Index is trending significantly higher. Most importantly, if the global economy was slowing down rapidly, then all transportation costs would be falling. That is not what we are seeing, which suggests that global growth continues to be fine.

The critical takeaway is whether this emerging supply chain congestion gains momentum or is just a blip.

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com